Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - AshMash

Pages: [1]
1
Somerset / Re: Roundabouts Children's Hotel W-S-M
« on: Monday 24 October 16 14:58 BST (UK)  »
Hi Sara,
The entrance was along the top left hand side of the garden and skirted round No1s back garden to the alleyway.
With regards to No1 St Paul's, when I was a resident of No3, next door was a normal home and all I remember then that it was home to a few elderly ladies. During the 1960`s it was bought by a builder from Winscombe called Winston and his Scottish born wife who we all called the Haggis as kids. Winston turned the property into an hotel but I cannot recall its name. It prospered for many years until Winston's sudden death in the late 60`s ( think that's right) but may have been very early 70`s. His wife remained at the property for some years after but sold up and relocated back to Scotland.
As I mentioned, the Roundabouts was bought up by my foster mother when Gabriel and Peggy retired, as such I used to go to and from school from what was now the Roundabouts day nursery. I remember cricket festivals in Clarence Park and all the cars parked in the middle of the road opposite the nursery and I also remember the steam trains on 2 lines at the bottom of the road as in those days you had stations at uphill, Lympsham, Brent Knoll, you changed at Highbridge and caught a train to Burnham, the station was opposite the RNLI station and I believe a supermarket is now where the station once stood.
When I next see my foster mother I will update her on what happened to the old nursery, at 88 she will be so thrilled at what your family did to the building.
Many thanks for your information, it has been a worthwhile find.

Ash

2
Somerset / Re: Roundabouts Children's Hotel W-S-M
« on: Monday 24 October 16 07:46 BST (UK)  »
Hi,

Just viewed the house photos and what a wonderful job your family made of restoring this house. The archway to Severn Road would have been in the top left hand side of the garden as you used to walk partly through next doors garden then down between the 2 houses at the back, you can see the natural spacing between the 2 houses in the photo taken from one of the back bedroom windows on the estate agents site.
I hope I have been able to fill in a few gaps, it might have been 62 years ago that I was taken there but the memories will never fade. The whole place just looks so much smaller now then when I remember it through a child's eye. I wish you good health in the future

Warm Regards

Ashley

3
Somerset / Re: Roundabouts Children's Hotel W-S-M
« on: Sunday 23 October 16 17:40 BST (UK)  »
Hi again,
The photo is taken at the back left hand side of the rear garden, the concrete covered about 3/4 of the width of the garden. You could also walk through an archway through to Severn Road shops through the other properties back garden.
The filled in walkway on the landing comes from a time when the two properties were occupied by the two owners and the other property was also used as some sort of residence or an overflow when the original hotel was "full". To my knowledge this was turned back into two separate properties in the early 1960`s but I believe was also used as an education facility for the older inhabitants.
It would be good to see a few updated photos, that would be most kind,

4
Somerset / Re: Roundabouts Children's Hotel W-S-M
« on: Sunday 23 October 16 16:49 BST (UK)  »
Here is the raised concrete patio with me and some of the other residents

5
Somerset / Re: Roundabouts Children's Hotel W-S-M
« on: Sunday 23 October 16 16:39 BST (UK)  »
The Roundabouts children's hotel was run by 2 spinsters called Gabriel Lemon (Auntie Gay) and  one called Peggy who smoked a pipe and wore very masculine clothes, It was bought by Gabriels father who owned some larger properties further up the road near to St Pauls church. The Hotel, as it was called was like a private Barnados and was used mostly for single mothers who were shamed into giving up their children and ethnic children from white parents which was a major taboo in the 50`s. The majority of us their were illegitimate and given up to be fostered out eventually when a foster parent was found.
In the back garden I remember a raised concrete circular patio which housed for the early years an actual children's roundabout but was dismantled by the end of the 1950`s.
The 2 front rooms were the play rooms and were heated by 2 small single bar heaters high up on the walls, we ate in the back right hand room which lead to the kitchen. The "Office" was the room on the back left with toilets and wash basins with cold water only dividing the two rooms. The entrance hall was huge which lead up the stairs to the first of 2 upper floors, the 1st floor were bedrooms with 3 or 4 of us to a bed, no carpets and if you wanted a wee in the night you did it in the bed as you were kept in the beds by metal side bars. Any washing was done in tin baths and shared with other kids and was once a week if you were lucky.
The top floor was used as the owners residence and was strictly out of bounds.

From the eating room , it lead down a small corridor past a back door to the garden and past what was the food store (pantry - no fridges those days) into the kitchen which was a cold tiled floor with large hot water boilers and a large gas cooker, food seemed to be on the cooker at all times and I remember well  that food was of poor quality and you sat at your table until you ate it, alternatively it was pushed down your throat by Peggy or Gabriel. Easter eggs were boiled eggs which had been painted. Anyway, past the kitchen was another corridor which had a massive coal fired boiler in it where clothes were hung over rope hung airers to dry. after that another room housed the laundry room and mangles ( clothes ringers) then that opened out onto the bottom of the garden.

During the late 1950`s Gabriel and Peggy retired and relocated to Chislehurst in Kent and fostered 2 of the kids there (Penny and Stephen ) I was fostered out to the lady who took over the place  and ran it as the Roundabouts Day Nursery until she retired many years ago. This was my home from 6 weeks to 6 years as they could not find anyone who wanted me. The conditions did get better towards the end but it was what it was as that is what happened in those days but it is etched deeply into your memory and myself and countless others will have shared those memories and the respondents who say this was not a happy time for them I can totally emphasise with.
I am sorry if this is not the rosy story you were hoping to hear but I remember that place even as a small child very well.

Regards

Ashley

6
Somerset / Re: Roundabouts Children's Hotel W-S-M
« on: Sunday 23 October 16 15:54 BST (UK)  »
Hi,

I used to live there from 1954 - 1960 then fostered out by one of the carers when it turned into a day nursery. I can tell you a bit more about it if you still want to know. Its not all pleasant reading but it was where I was placed at 6 weeks of age.

Pages: [1]