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James Arthur Weeks/Emily Maud Waltham
Life and times of James Arthur and Emily Maud Waltham Weeks family.
JAMES ARTHUR WEEKS was born in a one-storey cottage (now demolished) in a
lane now known as Charlton Park Lane in Charlton, Kent, but known then as Weeks's
Lane. From his own account of his early life, written many years later, he
appears to have been a lively lad, interested in outdoor activities such as
swimming and shooting. He went to school in Greenwich, and among other things
developed an interest in Pitman's shorthand, which he learnt from the headmaster
Dr Hepher who had been taught personally by Sir Isaac Pitman himself. At his best
James could reach over 200 words a minute. (At one time he wanted to be an
engineer but gave up the idea because it would interfere with his interest in
shorthand!) He also developed an interest in languages, studying French, German
and Italian and in due course also Hebrew and Greek. Much of his education was
derived from evening classes as he left school at 14 and joined his father in the
market gardening business, which included selling their produce at Covent Garden
from 5 am onwards three mornings a week.
Although brought up in the Church of England, James came in contact with
the Plymouth Brethren, probably through Dr Hepher, and, to use his own words, "was
converted at the age of 13 years and 5 months through the instrumentality of a Mr
Wm B Sleeman". He was attached to his mother, whom he used to describe as "the
most patient woman he ever knew", but when she died, at the end of a long and
painful illness, James felt that as a convinced member of the Brethren he could
not attend a Church of England funeral. His father was furious at his attitude,
and they remained estranged from each other until his father also died a few
months later.
EMILY MAUD WALTHAM was born at 49 Crescent Rd, Plumstead. After leaving
school she trained to be a teacher at Homerton College, near Victoria Park,
Hackney, North London, starting there on 28 January 1886. That summer she had two
weeks holiday at Southsea. When she was qualified she taught at Plum Lane School,
Woolwich. In April 1889 she was, to judge from a letter written to her by her
mother, at Brighton, probably on holiday. She was a member of the Plymouth
Brethren at Woolwich, probably meeting at Charlton Hall, and it was there that she
and James met.
After their marriage James and Maud lived in Algernon Rd, Lewisham. When
James' father died the market garden business was sold. James tried dealing on the
foreign fruit market for a time but his great interest in shorthand led him to try
for an office job. Having no training or experience whatever (for example he tried
to print a copy of a letter without realising the need to use copying ink) he was
dismissed from his first job within a fortnight. Undaunted, he then got a job in a
larger office where he was able to learn from others, to such good effect that
within a few months he became Manager of the Correspondence Department. He stayed
there for about 2½ years during which time he studied for, and eventually passed,
the Intermediate Examination of the Institute of Secretaries. He then got
appointed as the Company Secretary to Nuttalls Ltd, a family business with a
number of shops in Kingston, Surrey. As a result the family moved in 1898 to 44
Richmond Park Rd, Kingston, and from there in 1902 to 49 Birkenhead Avenue (now
demolished).
James' employer at Nuttalls was a coarse character and used to shout a
lot. One day when he was bellowing "Weeks, Weeks" James decided to ignore him and
quietly get on with his work. Eventually his employer came to where he was and
shouted "Didn't you hear me calling you?" James said that he had heard some coarse
character shouting but didn't think it could possibly be his boss wanting him. His
employer never shouted for him again.
In 1908 Nuttalls got into financial difficulties through erecting a new
building whose costs had risen too high, and James lost his job and his £1000
stake in the company. He decided to visit the United States to look at the
possibility of emigrating with his wife and family, and he spent several months in
New York but in the end returned without any firm plans. Some years earlier when
his father died he had received a cheque for £300 and had not known what to do
with it till a friend had suggested buying some houses, which he did, in East
London and New Cross, so now he decided he would manage them himself. He also
started to devote much of his time, with Maud, to the further education of their
children since the local school was not adequate.
While still at Nuttalls James had insisted on a month's holiday each year,
and the family used to spend two or more weeks each summer on the Sussex coast,
usually at Worthing but once (in 1909) at Steyning. James and the older children
would cycle there (about 60 miles) while Maud and the younger ones went by train.
In the summer of 1912, the last occasion that they went, the weather was so hot
that they decided to cycle during the night, and stopped for a sleep on the
roadside near Dorking. Once at the seaside the holidays were spent largely in
swimming and beach cricket. Once James went swimming in a hailstorm, and the
hailstones beat on his bald head so painfully that he had to keep ducking his head
under the water.
The family were regular attenders at the Exclusive Brethren meetings held
initially over an ironmongers shop run by Mr Ide in Fife Rd, Kingston, and then
from 1904 in Kings Rd Hall. In 1910 the meeting split, with the Weeks family
joining a breakaway group which also included the Betts, Groves, Inkpens, Menzies
and Fosters. This group met in one or another of its members houses. Then in early
1912 the Weeks family came in touch with Mr Heward and the assembly of believers
which met at 61 Upton Lane, Forest Gate, and at 43A The Broadway, Walham Green (Mr
Richmond's house). The family started to travel often across London to meetings at
Forest Gate. Being drawn towards Mr Heward's views, and with a number of houses
already in East London, James and Maud decided in the autumn of 1912 to move to
Milton House, 103 York Rd (now called Derby Rd), East Ham. They lived there for
the next 6 years. James grew a high screen of convolvulus at the end of the garden
to hide the sight of the rather slummy houses at the back.
In August 1918 the family moved to 74 Claremont Rd, Forest Gate, the only
home James rented rather than owned. It was their first house to be fitted with
electric lighting. One night before the end of the war two of the children were
playing with the two-way switches at the top and bottom of the stairs, one trying
to keep the light on and the other to turn it off. They were stopped by shouts
from neighbours who thought they were trying to signal to German aeroplanes. On
another occasion the family returning from a Saturday evening meeting found the
house had been broken into, but although the place was in a mess nothing was
taken. In 1924 they were asked by the owner to leave and James bought 77 Claremont
Rd, almost opposite, where they lived for the next 30 years or so.
From 1912 until James died over 40 years later he and Maud were staunch
supporters of the assembly at 61 Upton Lane and regularly attended the meetings.
For a long time James took down in shorthand virtually all Mr Heward's many
addresses (he would speak for about 20 minutes perhaps 3 times each Sunday and 2
or 3 times on weekday evenings), and had a number of them typed up and circulated.
As time went on he played an increasing part himself in the conduct of the
meetings, speaking briefly and effectively on numerous occasions and taking part
in discussions. He also made a major and continuing contribution to the financial
support of Mr Heward and the assembly, including buying 61 Upton Lane (a large
four-storied building) when the owner was no longer willing to rent it out.
Of James and Maud's children, 3 out of the first 4 (Arthur, Flo and Ethel)
together with their families were also members of the assembly at 61 Upton Lane.
However the others broke away to return to the Exclusive Brethren. Under Mr
Heward's influence the '61-ites' would not permit communion with any group not
agreeing with their interpretation of the Bible, and in particular their
celebration of the Lord's Supper in the evening with unleavened bread and
unfermented wine. So James, who had a typical Victorian attitude to family
discipline in any case, took a rather harsh attitude to his younger children's
apostasy. Both Nell and Leslie lived away from home for a period. At one stage
Cecil had to eat his meals on his own in the kitchen.
Meanwhile James' interest in house dealing and maintenance continued to
grow. Many of the houses were bought in the name of one or another of his
children. In the early 1920's, when his sons Arthur, Leslie and (later) Cecil were
working with him he set up the firm of "Weeks and Sons, Estate Agents, Builders
and Decorators". In the 1930's it was run by his sons-in-law Albert Shriever and
Kristen Riisnaes; later Kristen ran it on his own. It managed about 30 or 40
houses, mostly spread singly or in small rows around West and East Ham, with about
6 in Knoyle St, New Cross.
By this time James had effectively retired and was devoting his time to
Bible study, rose growing and cricket. The roses in his front garden, on 10 foot
high trellises, were a beautiful and impressive sight, and he claimed that people
would come a long way to see them. Although he had not played cricket since he
left school almost 50 years before, he took the game up again with enthusiasm. He
recognised that he was unlikely to be a "first choice" player for any regular team
so his practice was to join two clubs provided each could guarantee him a game
every other Saturday. During the summer of 1947, when he was nearly 80, he and his
grandson Eric Riisnaes played together for a club called the Centralians (usually
batting at 10 and 11). He was also keen on watching cricket, usually at the Essex
county ground in Valentines Park, Ilford. On one occasion he found he did not have
enough money to get home, and had to pawn his watch to get some. Everyone was very
amused when, during a meeting at '61' shortly afterwards, he was asked to confirm
whether the clock was correct and replied that he couldn't help as he had pawned
his watch!
In spite of this fondness for a team game James was a shy rather than a
gregarious man. He had his own sense of humour, often laughing uproariously with
his son Arthur. He was always very fond of children, first his own and later his
grand-children. He went bald while still a young man, and used to wash his bald
head under a tap every day. In general he made almost a fetish of personal
cleanliness and would not allow jam or any sticky food near him on the meal table.
He usually wore a closely trimmed beard and in later years when it had become
silvery he claimed with a touch of pride that he had more than once been mistaken
for King George V.
Maud's personality was a good foil to his. She was upright, forthright,
not given to humour, a careful housekeeper (James said, half jokingly, that she
under-fed him), and a good mother and grandmother. Of medium height in her youth,
she became both short and bowed as she got older.
Both remained in excellent health until they were quite old. In the early
1940's they went to stay at Rushall in Norfolk with their daughter Flo and her
family, and happily rode bicycles again, something they had not done for 30 years.
In her 80th year Maud walked up Beachy Head, near Eastbourne, with her daughter
Ethel. However a few years later Maud had a slight stroke, and though she
recovered almost completely the couple were for a short while dependent on others
to look after them for the first time in their lives.
When James died, of cancer after a short illness, Maud lived on at 77
Claremont Rd for some time, with a friend to keep her company. Then she moved to
Thundersley, Essex, to live with her daughter Flo and her husband. The last years
of her life (from 25 Oct 1957) were spent with her daughter Eleanor at 1 Mill Rd,
Deal, Kent. By this time her memory, even of her own family, was becoming very
poor, but she continued to enjoy excellent health until she died of old age only 3
months before her 100th birthday.
ARTHUR HENRY was born at Lewisham, and grew up in Kingston, Surrey.
When the First World War started in 1914, Arthur was working for
Westminster Bank in London and living with his parents at East Ham. He registered
as a Consciencious Objector on religious grounds, and was at first allowed to
stay in a "reserved occupation" by working on a farm at Rainham in Essex. Having a
not very robust constitution (he was always very thin) he found this extremely
hard. Later the regulations were tightened up further as more men were needed for
the war, and he was ordered to join the Army. He duly reported at the Recruiting
Centre but when ordered to put a uniform on he refused, and he was then sentenced
to solitary confinement in Wormwood Scrubs. After a few weeks or months he was
transferred to Wakefield Jail in Yorkshire where he worked at making mailbags. At
Christmas some of the prisoners were let out for a few days to visit their
families but were not allowed to use any public transport. Arthur's father James
went up to Wakefield and somehow managed to get hold of two bicycles on which they
set out to cycle back to London. However Arthur was clearly not strong enough to
cycle the whole way, so they gave up and hired a taxi. James had not got enough
money with him to pay for the taxi so they decided to go to Walham Green where a
close friend, Mr Richmond, had a shop and plenty of ready cash. They arrived on
the Saturday night, slept there, and on the Sunday morning James and Arthur walked
all the way across London from Walham Green home to East Ham. It appears that the
ban on use of public transport was lifted in time for him to go back to Wakefield
by train.
In due course he was moved again, to Dartmoor, where he worked in the
fields. He was happier there than at previous gaols and made a number of Christian
friends.
After the war Westminster Bank refused to have him back as he had been a
C.O. so he studied to become a chartered accountant. For a time he had an office
at Stratford, and after marrying (Oct 1923) Hilda Lilian Cook (b 11 Mar 1903)
they lived for a period (1926/7) upstairs at 23 Chobham Rd, in a house occupied by
his sister Ethel and her family. Later Arthur took over an office in Forest Gate,
over a bank on the corner of Woodgrange Rd and Osborne Rd, and stayed there for
the rest of his working life. At one time Hilda's brother worked for him; later
his sister-in-law Gladys worked as his secretary, as did Ethel and his own wife
Hilda occasionally.
Arthur and Hilda lived at 4 Claremont Rd, Forest Gate (the same road where
Arthur's parents lived) for many years, and then moved to 147 Clayhall Ave,
Ilford, before the Second World War. They moved again several times, mostly in the
Ilford/ Wanstead area but also living for a time at Ernest Rd, Emerson Park,
Hornchurch.. The house in Claremont Rd remained their property and was occupied by
three spinster sisters, the Elseys, till it was hit by a land mine dropped during
the night of 16 April 1941. All three sisters miraculously survived but the house
was totally destroyed.
Arthur and Hilda had one son, Geoffrey Chudleigh (b 6 Jul 1939). They were
both fond of classical music and had an extensive collection of gramophone
records. They were consistent attenders at the meeting at 61 Upton Lane throughout
their life in the Forest Gate area, though Arthur did not say much at the
meetings. Arthur was tall and thin, with a somewhat sharp sense of humour. Hilda
was short and swarthy with a husky voice.
When Arthur retired the couple moved to a bungalow at Southbourne near
Bournemouth together with Geoffrey who remained unmarried. After Hilda died (22
Sep 1979) Arthur and Geoffrey continued to live together. Arthur began to suffer
from nerves and depression and Geoffrey did not want to have to look after him.
Eventually Arthur went to live in an old peoples' home in Christchurch. His mind
and memory started to fail and some months before he died his sisters Ethel and
Peg stopped visiting him.
FLORENCE DAISY was born in Kingston, Surrey. As the eldest daughter she
felt impelled to set a good example to her sisters and younger brothers. She was
devoted to her father and always tried to sit next to him at meals.
At the same time she enjoyed adventure. Once in Wanstead Park she was
climbing out along the branch of a tree when it broke and she fell into the lake
below. She had to stand up in the tram (or bus) going home as she was too wet to
sit down.
Once, in her teens, she was looking after a £5 note for her sister Peg - a
large white note in those days, and of course a great deal of money. She needed to
visit a public lavatory, and as there was no paper there she used a piece she was
carrying. To her horror she realised too late the she had flushed the £5 note down
the pan. It took her many months to save enough money to discharge the debt to her
sister.
She married (31 Jul 1925) James Albert Shriever (b 16 Oct 1890) who was of
German descent. Some years earlier Albert had become a Christian and joined the
meeting at 61 Upton Lane. When Kristen Riisnaes joined the same meeting they
became friends and used to visit the London docks together on missionary work (see
2).
After Albert and Flo got married they lived in a number of houses
including, for a time around 1929, upstairs at 23 Chobham Rd where Flo's sister
Ethel lived. Eventually they settled at 136 Hampton Rd, Forest Gate, not far from
Flo's parents. Early in the Second World War they moved to the upstairs of 77
Claremont Rd (Flo's parents house) partly in order to be near them in the event of
air raids. During most of this time Albert worked as a house repairer and
decorator, initially for Weeks and Sons and then on his own.
When the air raids started in 1940, Albert did duty as a fire watcher.
However the continual night raids began to affect his nerves and the family
decided to get out of London. In April 1941 they moved to Glemsford in Suffolk.
By July they had moved again, to Rushall in Norfolk. After living for a few weeks
in a very old damp house owned by a Christian acquaintance, Mr Deeks, they settled
in a modern bungalow close by. It was built of wood and was very cold in winter;
despite a fire burning all day in the living room boots left by the door would
stay frozen.
Throughout their time in the Forest Gate area the family were regular
participants in the meetings at 61 Upton Lane. When they moved away they remained
in contact through small associated groups at Glemsford and then at Dickleburgh
near Rushall in Norfolk with the Lings and Burrows families. In time they started
to attend a Mission Hall at nearby Pulham. After the war they moved to a house in
Pulham, next door to a friend from the Mission Hall, Miss Durrant.
Some years later they, together with Miss Durrant, moved to Thundersleigh
in Essex. After Albert died (17 May 1963) Flo continued to live at Rayleigh,
Essex, with Miss Durrant.
Albert and Flo had 2 children, Arthur (b 26 Aug 1926) who married Joy
Coleman and had 2 adopted children, and Daisy (b 3 Apr 1929) who married Alfred
Gledhill, an evangelical minister, and had 2 children. Daisy suffered a great
deal, both physic-ally and mentally, in later life and died 14 Sep 1992.
ELEANOR MAUD, known as Nell, was the most lively and tomboy-ish of the
sisters, and a natural leader of the younger members of the family.
She attended the meetings at 61 Upton Lane with the rest of the family,
but started to object to the very strict code of dress which the ladies adhered to
under the influence of Mr Heward's mother, with only black or sombre colours and
necklines high on the throat. (She once wore a coloured ribbon on her hat in the
meeting and was told off by Mrs Heward). Her parents tried to enforce her
compliance but relations got so bad that she left home and went to live with her
aunt Annie and family in Plumstead for a time. Later, after the Great War had
started, she went back to Kingston to live with Mrs Betts who was living alone,
her husband having been called up. Whilst there she rejoined the Exclusive
Brethren, but to make family relations even worse it was the opposing group to the
one her parents had belonged to up to 1912.
She became engaged to Chris Menzies, a son of the family which had been
associated with the Weeks's for many years in Kingston and were still members of
the Brethren. He emigrated to South Africa and it was understood that she would
follow him out there in due course. However his letters to her started to get very
strange. Meanwhile on a visit to Deal, Kent, she met Alfred Cecil Hunnisett, also
a member of the Brethren, and fell in love with him, so she broke off her
engagement to Chris Menzies. Cecil was working in London at that time so Nell
started to attend the same Brethren meeting at Bow, and her younger sister Peg and
brother Cecil left 61 Upton Lane and started attending there as well.
Nell and Cecil married (21 Apr 1924) and for the rest of their lives lived
at Deal. They had 7 children between 1925 and 1937, David, Paul, Philip, James,
William ("Bill"), Julia and Alan. At the time of Cecil's death (30 Apr 1954) he
and Nell were living at 1 Mill Rd, Deal, and she continued to live there. Later
her son Philip and his family moved in next door. Philip was a qualified
accountant and she did part-time secretarial work for him.
LESLIE WALTHAM was a lively lad, and while in Mrs Betts school in Kingston
was said to have been caned quite often. Later he, with others of the family,
attended Mr Heward's Bible School where he was normally graded second to his
sister Ethel. However like his sister Nell he did not like the atmosphere at the
'61' meeting. He liked staying out late at night but his father insisted that he
should be home by 10 o'clock. On one occasion (at 74 Claremont Rd) his father
locked the front door at 10pm but Leslie climbed over the roof and got in through
a back door. In the end relations got so strained that he left home and lived in
lodgings.
When Nell got engaged to Chris Menzies and planned to follow him to South
Africa, Leslie decided to go with her. In the end Nell broke off her engagement
and did not go, but Leslie went anyway in Sep 1920 and settled in Capetown.
He married (1922) Ruth Louise Gilowey (b 17 Oct 1900). Ruth was a member
of the Exclusive Brethren, and when Leslie would not join as well the sect tried
to get the couple to break up, even offering Ruth other accommodation if she would
leave him. In the end Ruth left the sect to stay with her husband.
After their first son, Walter, was born (31 Mar 1923) the family returned
to England where the next son, Douglas, was born (7 Sep 1924). For part of the
time they lived in Upton Lane, Forest Gate. After about a year they returned to
Capetown and had 3 more children, Joyce, Anthony and Brian.
Leslie and Ruth revisited England in 1949 and again 1n 1966. Joyce married
(11 Feb 1956) Alastair Thomas Triggs and later came to live in Cuffley, Herts,
near to her aunt Ethel (see 2).
GERTRUDE MARY disliked her given names, and when her sister Nell started
to call her Peg the name stuck. As the 3rd daughter and the 6th out of 7 children
she felt a bit unwanted in the family but her childhood was nevertheless generally
happy. Like her brothers and sisters she attended Mrs Betts' school at Kingston.
She was rather shy and when told to take a message to Mrs Betts in a room upstairs
was afraid to go in, for which she was later punished. Later she together with her
brother Cecil attended a very small school the only teacher being Mrs Betts'
sister Ada Groves.
When the family moved to Forest Gate Peg attended Mr Heward's Bible
School, but the reports Mr Heward sent to her parents showed that she and Cecil
did not perform as well as their elder brothers and sisters.
Around 1916 or 1917 Peg started working at the Joint Stock Bank near the
Bank of England. She enjoyed doing shorthand and typing and the freedom to make
friends. She had to give her mother her entire wages and was given a small amount
back.
Like her sister Nell, Peg was unhappy with the sombre atmosphere and
attitude to dress at the meeting at 61 Upton Lane, largely due to the influence of
Mrs Heward. She knew she was not yet a Christian but consoled herself with the
thought that at least the 61-ites, unlike the Brethren, predicted a warning period
before Christ returned to judge the earth so she had a little time in hand. Her
father made his children take notes during Mr Heward's addresses. Peg once used
the occasion to write a letter to a boy, a son of the Richmond family at Walham
Green, whom she had become friendly with on holiday. She mentioned in the letter
where she was writing it. Unfortunately the boy showed it to his mother who in turn
sent it back to Peg's parents and she got into trouble. She became very unhappy
during this period of her life and on occasion wished she were dead.
When her sister Nell started to attend a Brethren's meeting at Bow in East
London, she suggested that Peg might like to come along as well. Peg was delighted
by the happier atmosphere she found there, the more so because it was there that
she met Herbert Walter Moss (b 15 Aug 1907), whose family then lived in Bow but
later moved to Forest Gate. When Bert and Peg got married (12 Aug 1933) Peg's
parents and those brothers and sisters at '61' would not attend the wedding
service held at the Brethren meeting place in Bow, though both bride and groom
families joined in a reception afterwards at 77 Claremont Rd.
Bert was a chartered surveyer working for the London County Council. As a
boy he had won a scholarship to Bancroft's School at Loughton, an almost unheard-
of success from such a poor background. He hated the school at first, and ran away
twice; paradoxically this made him popular with the other boys and he did well
after that.
Bert and Peg lived for a time at 27 Beechfield Rd, Bromley, Kent. Around
the start of World War II they moved to 37 Clarendon Way, Marlings Park,
Chislehurst, Kent. They had 2 children, Rosemary (b 8 Dec 1937) and Bernard (b 26
Jul 1942). For a time during the war Bert would not only do a normal day's work at
the office but also stay up all night dealing with air raids and fires. After the
war the family moved back to Bromley, to 22 Wanstead Rd, where they lived for many
years.
Bert suffered from disease in his leg bones from his school-days, and with
other problems such as eye cataract developing later he underwent no less than 23
operations during his lifetime. However he remained cheerful and kind to the last,
dying of cancer on 12 May 1991.
CECIL JAMES was born at 49 Birkenhead Ave, Kingston, Surrey. From birth
two of his toes were joined together. As a youngster he was lively and pleasant,
with dark eyes and hair, and his elder brothers and sisters made a fuss of him. At
the age of 2 he fell into the fire and was badly burned, but eventually recovered
without permanent scars. When still only 3 or 4 years old he climbed a ladder left
outside the house and rising to the third floor. The family were afraid to call
him down but he was eventually rescued through a window.
By the time he reached school age the private school attended by his
brothers and sisters had closed down, and he and his sister Peg had private
tuition from Miss Ada Groves. When he was 6 the family moved across London to East
Ham, and he and Peg were taught at home by their elder sister Flo. In his teens he
showed considerable talent as a painter, and in particular copied beautifully a
painting of some lions.
He worked for Weeks and Sons for many years doing house repairs and
decorating. Later he worked on his own.
As a boy he attended the meetings at 61 Upton Lane, but he later followed
the example of his sisters Nell and Peg and joined the Brethren meeting at Bow. He
then suggested to his sister Peg that they should attend the Brethren meeting at
Ilford, since it was nearer to home. His parents strongly opposed his views and
for a time would not have him at their mealtable so that he had to eat in the
kitchen. Nevertheless he stuck to his guns. He was a good speaker and was invited
to speak at Brethren meetings, and in particular childrens meetings, over a wide
area.
He became friendly with Gladys Katherine Skinner (b 5 Sep 1902) from
Ilford, the third of a family of 5 girls and 2 boys, brought up in the Brethren.
Gladys' father, who was a leader in the Brethren - he later gave the address at
Peg and Bert's wedding - demanded to know what his intentions were, so he said
marriage, perhaps feeling under pressure! However their marriage (19 Oct 1929)
apparently turned out to be very happy. Gladys had trained as a singer and had a
strong contralto voice. Cecil and Gladys first lived at 103 Gurney Rd, Stratford,
not far from Chobham Rd where his sister Ethel lived.
Cecil was a keen cyclist and he and Gladys used to ride round on a tandem.
On one occasion he cycled to Rushall, Norfolk, a distance of over 100 miles, in
about 4 or 5 hours. He also owned a canoe which he used to paddle at Burnham-on-
Crouch.
In the mid-1930's Cecil and Gladys moved from Gurney Rd to a bungalow near
Hainault. Later they moved to a corner house in Wanstead Park Rd, Ilford. In March
1945 a V2 rocket landed nearby and their roof collapsed. Although they were lying
in bed at the time they were unharmed. On 8 March they moved to the upstairs flat
at 77 Claremont Rd previously occupied by the Shrievers. Their house in Wanstead
Park Rd was eventually repaired but they never moved back to it.
One day in 1953 Cecil came home from work feeling ill and weak. He lay in
bed for many weeks, feeling extremely weak and in great pain, and eventually
entered Queen Mary's Hospital, Stratford. It was a long time before his illness
was diagnosed as leukaemia. He had many blood transfusions and for a time was able
to return home. But he had soon to return to hospital, this time at Samson St,
East Ham, and after a further long and painful period he died. He was buried in
the City of London Cemetery at Manor Park.
Cecil was short and slight of build. Like his father and brothers he went
bald at an early age. He was a cheerful and extroverted character and enjoyed
playing with children, though he and Gladys had none themselves.
After Cecil's death Gladys continued to live at 77 Claremont Rd until her
mother-in-law sold the house and moved away. She then returned to Ilford to live
with her sisters who were either widowed or unmarried. Later the group moved to
Eastbourne. By 1988 all her sisters had died and she was living in an old peoples
home. She died 17 June 1991.
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