Kath
Crooks has lived at 11 Pound Green for the
past forty-six years and before that at
Gt. Thurlow. She is the second child of
a family of fifteen, her parents being Mr.
and Mrs. Fred and Gert Atherton. She says
she had a poor but happy childhood, although
she did not enjoy school and remembers watching
the clock for the time to go home. Her memories
include meetings at Mrs. Ryder's at Gt.
Thurlow Hall for the girls' friendly society,
trips out and the pageant.
Kath
remembers the Thurlow Flower Show held on
the 1st August every year when she tried
in vain to win first prize for the best
wild þower collection. Her father
worked at Gt. Thurlow rectory for the Rev.
Basil le Fleming as a gardener and handyman.
He was caretaker of Gt. Thurlow church;
he kept the fires going, rang the bells,
sang in the choir and pumped the organ.
He held the key and today it is still
kept in the same place. Kath says they never
wanted for anything when Mr Fleming was
around, and she describes him as a wonderful
man.
She
left school at fourteen and went to work
in a house at Gt. Bradley. When she saw
the list of duties she had to do in one
day she wondered how she could possibly
get through them. Starting at 6.30 a.m.
with blackleading the grate she toiled all
morning, changing after lunch into cap and
apron when she had darning and various other
jobs to do, leaving her exhausted at the
end of the day. All this for five shillings
and four pence, just twenty-seven pence
in today's currency!
The
war put an end to this and Kath went to
Haverhill to work. There she met Bill, who
was in the airforce serving at Stradishall,
and they were married in 1941. Kath worked
on the land during the war. Kath's hobbies
are now bingo, crosswords and knitting.
She can't imagine living anywhere else,
although she says it's not such a close
community now and lots of the old characters
are no longer with us.