Area you lived as a child

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!
There where quite a few "mobile shops" back then, seeling Pop, Tea, sweets and basic groceries. But I very seldom crossed the railway tracks, that seperated Bricknell to Priory, when i was a kid living on fairfax ave (went to Appleton Primary, then Wyke Junior school, before moving to my Grandparents on 21st Ave). I used Jeff Barmby's newsagent, and got to know him and his wife quite well (still have a chat if we bump into each other at matches). He took his lad all over for Football training (was always dressed Liverpool kits).And in those years used to knock around with Nick's Mrs ( when she was Mandy Telford who went to Bricknell School, with Peter Hird, (who lived on Chants, and I believe has taken over his dads crane/lifting company), and her mate Debbie Adams used to live with her. We used to go St Aidens Disco, and Wyke youth club.)
Here's me blabbering on ,yet again.
Maybe I should try and write my memoirs, before I turn senile.

i remember going over the railway lines to bira (is that how it was spelt?) youth club from setting dyke and ainthorpe. got the t shirt that night and the blood all over it as well!!!!!!
 
" Look Back in Anger '

You still got your 150 Vespa ... I use to have a 150 Super , sod knows why they called it a super but there fetching decent money now.

I'm into Vespa's myself , bloody lambretta's go bang too often , especially tuned up..

I use to go to the Hull Hawthorns SC at one time ..

Nah it's looooong gone 'boro, fortunately so has PC Nesbitt :biggrin:
 
  • Like
Reactions: FILEYseadog
I used to ride cycle speedway for the Black Knights. We started up on some waste ground near St Mikes and then moved to old tennis courts off Sutton Road. I spent hours fixing up bikes for the racing. I used to go through spokes like crazy and had at one time seven bikes in the club shed. We used something like 28 tooth rear sprockets and 36 front. We straightened the front forks in a drain and stuffed sand down the handle bars to bend then without creasing the bar. No helmets but I am sure that we had a coloured cap. I wore black motor bike gauntlets and on my inside foot I had a rubber overshoe. We had our club colours on a tabard. It was good honest fun.
The only time that was ever boring was Sunday afternoon. We would sit and listen to "sing something simple" waiting for the telly to start. I hated Sunday tea time and still do. I was lucky, we had a square pattern on our "fitted" carpet (posh for NHE) and I used it to line my matchbox cars up. There was always a cloths horse up in front of the gas fire all day Sunday as me Mam worked during the week. I dont think that I actually sat on a chair in our living room ever! It was the kitchen or I sat and played on the floor. I was spoilt, My dad was a train driver and me Mam a school cook, we never went without and as the youngest I was always dressed in good shoes and clothes.
I know that for some this could be a rose tinted view of our childhood world, but for me I was right in the middle. Down our street my mates Mam would pawn her best coat every Friday, they had chickens in their front room. I would be called in for my tea and when I went out again, my mate still would be outside having had nothing. He never said a word, but he would jump at a chance to have tea at our house. I just never saw it. But there was a cost to playing out. Every night I would have to have my head checked for nits!! Even we struggled at times and we had to make do. Looking back at the cheap food we would have it was bacon ribs that signaled a tightening up. My Dad supplemented his income by washing windows and doing Freddy Briggs shoe repairs. I only found out after dealing with his affairs that he paid in extra to his works pension and this really was a luxury out of his wages.
I was lucky, we had fantastic holidays. When I was 12 we went to Davos in Switzerland, the teachers at Shultz called me a lying git when I told them where I had been. I had to take the leaflet from the hotel to prove it.
 
I used to ride cycle speedway for the Black Knights. We started up on some waste ground near St Mikes and then moved to old tennis courts off Sutton Road. I spent hours fixing up bikes for the racing. I used to go through spokes like crazy and had at one time seven bikes in the club shed. We used something like 28 tooth rear sprockets and 36 front. We straightened the front forks in a drain and stuffed sand down the handle bars to bend then without creasing the bar. No helmets but I am sure that we had a coloured cap. I wore black motor bike gauntlets and on my inside foot I had a rubber overshoe. We had our club colours on a tabard. It was good honest fun.
The only time that was ever boring was Sunday afternoon. We would sit and listen to "sing something simple" waiting for the telly to start. I hated Sunday tea time and still do. I was lucky, we had a square pattern on our "fitted" carpet (posh for NHE) and I used it to line my matchbox cars up. There was always a cloths horse up in front of the gas fire all day Sunday as me Mam worked during the week. I dont think that I actually sat on a chair in our living room ever! It was the kitchen or I sat and played on the floor. I was spoilt, My dad was a train driver and me Mam a school cook, we never went without and as the youngest I was always dressed in good shoes and clothes.
I know that for some this could be a rose tinted view of our childhood world, but for me I was right in the middle. Down our street my mates Mam would pawn her best coat every Friday, they had chickens in their front room. I would be called in for my tea and when I went out again, my mate still would be outside having had nothing. He never said a word, but he would jump at a chance to have tea at our house. I just never saw it. But there was a cost to playing out. Every night I would have to have my head checked for nits!! Even we struggled at times and we had to make do. Looking back at the cheap food we would have it was bacon ribs that signaled a tightening up. My Dad supplemented his income by washing windows and doing Freddy Briggs shoe repairs. I only found out after dealing with his affairs that he paid in extra to his works pension and this really was a luxury out of his wages.
I was lucky, we had fantastic holidays. When I was 12 we went to Davos in Switzerland, the teachers at Shultz called me a lying git when I told them where I had been. I had to take the leaflet from the hotel to prove it.

we made our own track on barchards train yard land near 'big 'ill' off spring bank west extension and rode for the West Hull Rockets. that was in the day when you could go to Temple Street Bike scrap yard and buy all the second hand bits you needed to build as many bikes as you needed. god i got some shail grazes from the railway line quality cr@p we made the track from. Kingston Cyclones were the only real quality team around back then with the obvious interest from their Hessle Road sponsors. Also, the Schofield brothers of course
 
Davos in Switzerland the nearest we ever got to abroad was Fleetwood and that was only because me dads sister lived there we used to go on his motorbike and sidecar (triumph speed twin) we went through the out skirts of Leeds to get there still had trams running.
 
we made our own track on barchards train yard land near 'big 'ill' off spring bank west extension and rode for the West Hull Rockets. that was in the day when you could go to Temple Street Bike scrap yard and buy all the second hand bits you needed to build as many bikes as you needed. god i got some shail grazes from the railway line quality cr@p we made the track from. Kingston Cyclones were the only real quality team around back then with the obvious interest from their Hessle Road sponsors. Also, the Schofield brothers of course


[video=youtube;zEmD47XeF_Y]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zEmD47XeF_Y[/video]
 
Davos in Switzerland the nearest we ever got to abroad was Fleetwood and that was only because me dads sister lived there we used to go on his motorbike and sidecar (triumph speed twin) we went through the out skirts of Leeds to get there still had trams running.

We went by train, my Dads railway pass meant that we only had to pay for the Hotel. For 30years my Mam and Dad travelled throughout Europe each summer. As I said I was lucky. But nobody gave my parents anything, they grafted for it all.
 
I’m not saying we were unlucky we had some smashing holidays as kids, the club man had a caravan at Reighton Gap we used rent it nearly every year
 
Ah nostalgia! Chants Ave. Bricknell Jnr High til '76.

Hull Boys in the evenings (cant even remember where) but Perth St chippie on way home for 'scrapings'.
60p to get in South Stand.
Biking round the docks on Sundays.
 
Spring Bank til I was about 8, I was still at school down there til 11 but I'd moved up Wold Road by then. I remember after getting dropped off in a morning I used to head up to Freehold Street (the one opposite Park Street) where my mate lived and we'd then head to school from his. We'd not bother waiting for the lights to change, just sort of timed our runs across and then down Park Street to go in through the back streets. Football in the streets before school was good, except for the time I went running after a high ball that came down on the corner of the kerb and back up into my face full pelt from about 4 foot away. Once u Wold Road way it was all the fields at the back of the houses all the time, flooded in winter, but in summer quite often played football in the dark (We even had lights under the cones so we could see where the goals were).
How old are you? I lived off Spring Bank I went to Wawne Street school then went to Hall road school, Played football on "COPO" field where St Stevens Car park is now. great days.All my old mates were from those Spring bank streets.
 
Ah nostalgia! Chants Ave. Bricknell Jnr High til '76.

Hull Boys in the evenings (cant even remember where) but Perth St chippie on way home for 'scrapings'.
60p to get in South Stand.
Biking round the docks on Sundays.


Unless you mean a different thing, Hull Boys Club was down Roper Street off Waterhouse Lane. Imagine 9 year olds now walking through the red light area at 9, 10 o'clock at night these days!
 
Unless you mean a different thing, Hull Boys Club was down Roper Street off Waterhouse Lane. Imagine 9 year olds now walking through the red light area at 9, 10 o'clock at night these days!
I had my first and last boxing match in the club down Roper street not so happy memories I was murdered by a kid half my size.
 
Mel U

The lad you knew who never had much to eat,
did he live on 21st ave. and did his second name begin with an S and end with a H

This family had an air raid shelter in there back garden and we use to climb onto it then leap off the roof.

always bound to pick up nits as well when playing with them

Course it wasnt there fault some people just didnt have much money...
 
No Scar he didn't but I know who you mean. Loads of people know my family in and around North Hull, Me mam will tell you just about every family name on the estate.
 
Thats the thing with things these days such as fifa, if we'd of had them in the 70's I would never of touched my buckaroo or fuzzy felt!