POST WAR YEARS 1947-49
CHAPTER ELEVEN
We had been back in London for about six months when I was getting ready
for work one morning sitting on the chair sewing a button back on my
coat. My brother, who had been in the RAF out in Burma for quite some
time walked into the kitchen and dragged me out of the chair saying
Get out of my so-and -so chair I was surprised
at the vehemence that he was showing and asked him who the hell he was
swearing at. He raised his hand to swipe me across the face just as
my mother walked in with the teapot and pint milk bottle on a tray.
I just picked the milk bottle up and hit him across the neck with it.
I was seeing red because it was all uncalled for. My mother managed
to put the tray down and she started on me calling me all the little
mares under the sun. I ran into the passage to get my bike and I shouted
at my mother Stick your ray of sunshine
right up your a**e because I wont be staying to be treated like that
by him or any one else. I shot out quickly to work
before she paralysed me.
The same brother was de-mobbed in 1946 after being called up in 1940.
What a changed chap he was from when he first went in the R.A.F. He
suffered from terrible bouts of malaria as well. SO sad to think he
had come back as he was. That did not excuse his aggressive behaviour
though, and it made me aggressive in the fact that I would give as good
as he dished out. It was just by a fluke that I found out that if I
totally ignored him and talked over him or through him that hurt him
much more than wanting to brain him Anyway to get back to my tale.
When I got back home in the evening my brother acted as though nothing
had happened and started talking to me as though there had been no fracas
that morning.
I ignored him and I would not answer him but I did tell my mother in
front of him that I would be going back to Loughborough to live because
I was cheesed off with the life there and the eternal rowing. I went
back to Loughborough a fortnight later to live with an old neighbour.
I was at that time writing to my boyfriend who was in the RAF. I had
met Cliff while out with some girlfriends before I moved back to London.
We became friends and hung about together with nothing more than friendship
in mind at first because I knew he would be getting his calling up papers.
While I was in Loughborough our friendship got more serious, although
by this time he was in the R.A.F.
My sister was living with her husband and little lad in a rented house
and she asked me if I would like to go and live with her. It was just
coming up to Christmas time in 1947.
I was glad to go because the neighbour who I went to live with was over
run with bugs. These darn things used to hide from the light and only
come out at night. They looked similar to a lady bird but my goodness
they had a bite which brought up big weals on the body that itched like
hell which could turn septic. I understood now why my mother fumigated
everywhere whenever we moved.
I had not been lodging with my sister for long when her hubby decided
to go to London to live in the top two rooms in the house where my parents
lived. So I finished up back in London after being away from it for
about four months. I had to go with them because I could not get anywhere
else to live. I think my mother was pleased to see me back so that I
could do some of the housework.
Once back there I got a job at a pen factory in Hackney Wick. It was
a futuristic factory owned by a Scotsman. It had quite a few toilets
for the women and a woman was employed to wipe every toilet clean after
the women had used them. There were two big fountains in the toilets
that had a foot press to work them. I had never seen anything like it.
We had special coaches to pick us up in the mornings and to take us
home at night. It was a journey over Tower Bridge every day but I loved
it because I wasnt biking to work and getting my bike wheels caught
in the ruddy tram lines.
If there was any hint of smog a message came over the tannoy for all
Peckham girls to get to their coaches which were waiting to take them
home. This could be at 2pm in the afternoon because smog in London at
that time was a sure killer.
I can remember one day when the smog started coming down thick and
fast. It was just 2pm then and we boarded the coach for the half hour
drive home. It was absolutely terrifying because the smog had deadened
all sound and we found that we were going up the Tower Bridge as it
was opening. We all sat at a peculiar angle until the bridge closed
again. Everyone had a hanky or scarf tied round their mouth and nose.
That smog even baffled the fog horns on the ships. I got in home that
night at 7pm.
I was by this time engaged to Cliff and he very often came home on
a 48 hour pass to find me scrubbing the floors. He said one day
As soon as I am de-mobbed we are getting married because I cant
stand the way you are being used as a maid
It was a grim Christmas Eve in 1948 because Cliff had come to spend
Christmas with me and my family. A row developed between my father and
mother which involved my eldest brother. He wasnt there because
he had started courting and had gone to his woman friend's house for
Christmas. Cliff and myself were in the front room while my parents
were going at it hammer and tongs in the living room. Cliff said that
he would go and have a word with them to ask them to tone it down because
it was Christmas Eve. I told him to stay out of it because knowing my
mother she would not appreciate it. However he still decided to try.
I heard him knock on the door and say
Ma and Pop, will you call a truce because its Christmas time.
SILENCE Then my mother yelled at the top of her voice Who
asked you to come and interfere between my husband and me you ginger
haired git. When I want your bleeding advice I will ask you for it.
Oh my word I felt SO sorry for Cliff. He came back with his face as
red as the hair on his head as I said, I
told you NOT to. Not a happy Christmas at all that
year.
However Cliff was due to be de-mobbed in the June of 1949 and he said
that as soon as he was and got a job he would find us rooms so that
we could get married.
One day while working at the pen factory the usual visit came from
Andrews the Scottish owner. I had a box of rejects at the side of me
and the foreman picked them up and put one of my cards in it. It was
just as Andrews came to him and took one out to examine it that I realised
what had happened. The foreman was a brown noser and always tried to
look busy doing nothing of importance when Andrews did his rounds. All
of a sudden Andrews shouted out What
effing rubbish is this? Who the so-and-so hell is MJ?
I stood up and said, I am and that
was a box of rejects that he ( as I pointed to the foreman ) has picked
up just to look busy. I would appreciate it if you did not eff and blind
at me because I can do the same. If you pulled him ( pointing to the
foreman ) down from where he had crawled up your a**e and if he was
any sort of a man he would tell the truth and he would say what he has
done.
Andrews looked at me agog and said Get
down to my office. This I did but had to go down
three flights of steps while he made his way down on the lift. As I
walked in his office I was expecting my cards. I wondered if I was hearing
correctly because Andrews said I just
wanted to tell you that I like a person with spirit and you lassie have
it. I admire you for sticking up for yourself and I DO know what Bill
(the foreman ) is like. Now take yourself back upstairs and lets
forget it. I went upstairs in a dream because I
had never known a boss like that.
From then on he always made a point of saying Good
Morning to me and when he found out that I was
getting married and I would be leaving he came to me and told me to
get my coat because he was taking me to get my wedding present.
He bought me a beautiful Persian carpet that measured 7ft wide by 8ft.
He even had it delivered to my home.
Life is full of surprises.