Author Topic: Do You Remember Christmas?  (Read 1991 times)

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Offline Colwyn

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Do You Remember Christmas?
« on: December 20, 2011, 12:20:18 PM »
What do you remember about those Christmases in your early days of childhood? In my case that meant those of the early and mid 1950s.

Presents


Our Christmas treats were quite limited as rationing was still in place - the Sweet Ration of 4oz per person was not abolished until 1953. However, oranges - generally reserved for children and pregnant women - were still available. It was customary to have a blood orange in your stocking on Christmas morning. Indeed, this practice was so common that if you did someone a small favour during the year they would jokingly say "I'll give you a blood orange for Christmas".

When the sweet ration came off a whole new world of treats was opened up. One of my father's younger brothers worked as a manager for East African Airlines and lived in what we then called Salisbury in Rhodesia (technically The Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland) and thus, we assumed, was wealthy beyond our wildest dreams. Every Christmas, by some incomprehensible miracle of international communication, he not only ordered but actually paid for our presents - for me and my brother - to be delivered to us in Bristol whilst he never left Rhodesia. Imagine that! Wondrous technology in the new post-war world! Our presents didn't have to come very far; just down the road from Keynsham two miles away. Each of us got a Fry's Selection Box of chocolate bars and buttons that were then careful metered out to us so we would not get sick and they would last into the new year.

Along with this megatreat would be some nuts and, if we were lucky, a Dinky car each (so my brother and I spent Christmas morning racing round the mat) and a few other little toys. When I was older an Eagle Comic Annual was added (trashy comics such as Beano and Dandy that were not "improving" were not tolerated in our house).




Offline scorcher

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Do You Remember Christmas?
« Reply #1 on: December 20, 2011, 12:40:34 PM »
Ah Colwyn, such emotive memories. Similar era I guess.Sounds like Horace Batchelor was also running a sweet shop !

Offline Supacabby

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Do You Remember Christmas?
« Reply #2 on: December 20, 2011, 12:48:04 PM »
My childhood was spent in Jamaica. Xmas day was playing cricket on the beach with a coconut palm for a bat & a tennis ball so it floated in the sea & gave the dogs something to chase/fetch.

Always an amazing bbq lunch where Dad would manage to have 1 Red Stripe too many lol & Mum would have to drive home, happy days!

Offline heather07

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Do You Remember Christmas?
« Reply #3 on: December 20, 2011, 17:08:07 PM »
My xmas memory was of great excitement until you were allowed to get up.  Opening the presents.  For some reason the fire was always brighter and the feeling of family was stronger.  (That could have been because my dad worked away a lot but was always there at xmas)

Then we went out to play with our pals...toys forgotten.
Still have that special feeling today. :)

Offline Julesp

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Do You Remember Christmas?
« Reply #4 on: December 20, 2011, 21:39:46 PM »
I was the second youngest of 8 kids and my mum loved Christmas so although we didnt have a lot of money she made a big fuss on the day, decorations and the tree was up on the night of 11th December, as it was my younger brothers birthday on the 12th, he was 50 last week

Us youngest 3 always put a pillowcase out on Christmas eve, downstairs though not in our bedroom

Every Christmas morning we would get up so excited but would have to get washed dressed and have a christmas,once a year breakfast of tea with a drop of rum in and a couple of biscuits from the Christmas assorted biscuit tin

Then the present opening. We always had one big present, not always exactly what we wished for but as close as they could afford, one of us would receive a game, Monopoly, Cluedo or the like, which would come out later in the day and the whole family would play. A jigsaw, selection box, an annual, beano,sparky and the like, paints and colouring book each, and at the bottom nuts an apple and a tangerine! With the glut of tangerines I have had this year I cant believe how I used to look forward to that!

I continued the tradition with my 2 boys but they had Jaffa Cakes for breakfast, not the tinned biscuits, One year I asked my youngest son who would have been about 5 at the time what he would like for Christmas After a lot of thought he could only come up with a selection box! And hes still the same at 33 years old
 

Offline heather07

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Do You Remember Christmas?
« Reply #5 on: December 20, 2011, 23:26:51 PM »
Julesp,  Lovely post my kids are the same they too love xmas.

Offline Colwyn

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Do You Remember Christmas?
« Reply #6 on: December 21, 2011, 10:40:21 AM »
Visiting

Visiting was an important part of our Christmas. This had to be arranged in advance, since we had no telephone. Special visitors would be entertained in the Front Room. When we were small this was out of bounds to us boys. It was the "best" room and it had an old upright piano as well as a number of comfortable chairs. As I recall there were two types of visitors.

Daytime visitors were mostly women from the chapel and my brother and I were required to dress in our best clothes and sit still and quite in the Front Room while the guests were there and only speak if addressed directly. Our reward was that we could share the Welsh cakes that my mother had baked for the visit.

Evening visitors were quite different. Men and women would arrive. My mother would have made cawl (a clear stew of lamb and vegetables - but without leeks since my mother, unaccountably, didn't like them). We boys sat in the Front Room whilst steaming bowls of this were devoured along with doorsteps of bread. Soon we were whisked away to an early bed, but not before taking a peek at bottles coming out from the cupboard under the stairs - IPA and Guinness for the men, and sherry for the women. A little later sounds of piano-playing and singing began to drift upstairs.

For our own visiting the best was when my brother and I were allowed to visit "Auntie" and "Uncle" Rees on our own. Our house was at the bottom of a hill on the edge of some allotments and the Rees' house could be seen, some 400 yards away, on the top of the hill on the other side of the allotments. Each house could signal the other by putting a brightly coloured blanket out of the back bedroom window - to show we were leaving our house, and then had safely arrived at the other. Auntie (Dot) Rees and Uncle (DIP) Rees, much older than my parents, were an oddly matched pair. She was a wonderfully hospitable, happy woman who was stalwart of the Welsh Congregational Chapel in Bristol; he was a small genial man with a twinkle in his eye - an atheist, communist, technical college lecturer and stalwart of the Bristol trade union movement. We loved them dearly. Unlike visits to our house, going to the Rees' was a very informal affair. We sat around the coal fire in the kitchen (as in our house food preparation and cooking, washing up, clothes washing and similar tasks did not take place in the kitchen; all this was done in the attached scullery)  eating Auntie Rees' Welsh cakes and sponges (she was a rather better cook than my mother) and later, when I was a teenager, discussing politics with Uncle Rees (which my mother always advised me not to do since he might lead me astray into left-wingism). Then the blanket would be taken in, signalling to our home that we were just leaving, and we tore back down the allotments.
« Last Edit: December 21, 2011, 10:43:38 AM by Colwyn »

Offline Scunner

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Do You Remember Christmas?
« Reply #7 on: December 21, 2011, 10:50:32 AM »
Your mother was right though  :)

Offline Colwyn

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Do You Remember Christmas?
« Reply #8 on: December 21, 2011, 10:58:30 AM »
Quite so.

Offline usedbustickets

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Do You Remember Christmas?
« Reply #9 on: December 22, 2011, 08:54:06 AM »
In the late run up to christmas, after the pay out from the christmas club, my old man would go to the local off-license (the offy) to order the christmas booze.  The list always included:

Quart bottles of Courage Beer
Stones Ginger Wine (to make whiskey macs)
Egg Flip aka Advocaat:D
Bells Whiskey
R Whites Lemonade (4 Shandy and to drink neat!) 3d back on bottle after xmas
Port (4 Port and Lemon)
Manns Brown

Always a drink to offer any visitor over christmas, and when it was gone, well that was it for another year as regards drink in the house.  I can still smell that Courage Beer now :)
« Last Edit: December 22, 2011, 08:55:17 AM by usedbustickets »




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