Local Sweetheart
A mile or so away from our home was another source of delight. This was a sweet factory where vast quantities of the most delicious things were made.
Sherbet fountains, sherbet dabs, liquorice bootlaces, gob-stoppers, Everlasting toffee, betel nuts, humbugs, bulls-eyes, coconut ice and many other delights. A positive paradise.
In fact, all the products were lurid, multi-coloured and probably made from the cheapest and most suspect ingredients possible. But to me they had a magnetic attraction.
Each Saturday I had one penny (that is, one old penny, or 1/240th of a pound), pocket money and within minutes the factory had got some of it, by way of the local sweet shop.
Norman Parsons and I would go to this local shop (corner of Hampden Road), clutching our pennies, and I would be in amongst the brightly-coloured sweets immediately.
Norman, on the other hand, would pause, ponder, and then more often than not would say "No, I will save up for a few more weeks until I can afford a bar of Toblerone. Its much more nourishing".
And then potential disaster struck. One day my mother was walking past the sweet factory when she saw a man unloading sacks of sugar from the back of a horse-drawn cart, and taking them into the building.
But instead of carrying them on his back he was dragging them over the road and across the pavement. It had been raining heavily, the road was wet and had its usual generous covering of horse dung. Consternation!
That night I was told never ever again to buy sweets made by that dreadful company for, if I did, I would surely catch some awful illness from their unhygienic methods of handling the raw materials. I obeyed her, of course!
It was to that same shop on the corner of Hampden Road to which I was sent in 1930, one Sunday morning I think, by my father to buy his paper. Earlier that year I had watched in awe and amazement as Britain’s airship R101 cruised over Harringay, made a leisurely circle around Alexandra Palace, and then went on its way elsewhere. It started for me a life-long love of those beautiful majestic craft.
But on that fateful Sunday morning, outside the paper shop, I saw a placard which screamed:
R101 CRASHES. MANY KILLED.
For a few seconds I stood dumbfounded. How could this possibly be? I ran back home as fast as I could to tell my father the dreadful news. Unfortunately I had omitted to buy his paper!
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