I lived at 24 Reedsham Avenue until 1951. We were the last prefab before the railings round the Army Camp and faced the wall that ran along Sheepfoot Lane.
At the other end of Reedsham Avenue were the Nissan huts from the war.
My husband, who is 21 years older than me (I hasten to add) was a young pilot in the RAF and was stationed in the huts, in 1942-3, along with Jimmy Edwards and Sir Richard Attenborough whilst waiting to be allocated to an RAF station.
As a child, whose playground was Heaton Park, I remember Sunday nights at the bandstand in summer was always 'Go as you please' night. I think it was a talent show. You could pay to go in the enclosure and sit in a deck chair or just stand at the railing and watch it all for free.
Although I attended Victoria Ave school I remember going to the school near the top of Sheepfoot Lane on a Saturday Evening to some sort of social evening. Parents were in the hall and the children in a classroom drawing and crayoning etc.
We had to leave in 1951 because we needed three bedrooms, but I remember the prefeb days very fondly. At school we were the envy of the children who didn't live in a prefab because we had a fridge. It was run by gas and got quite hot on the top near the back - perfect for drying out your gloves after a wonderful morning snowballing.