Thursday, 15 August 2024

Memories of Horton (from Rosalind Willetts)

 Arthur Jacob Nature Reserve

There was a long high concrete wall to the south side of the Stanwell Road by the  Arthur Jacob nature reserve.  This meant the Stanwell road was always in the shade.  It was built to protect the public from the rifle range at Wraysbury.  The wall did not protect Dairy Farm in Coppermill Road from  stray bullets which was one reason why my great grandfather James Willatts, left Dairy Farm to farm in Wraysbury.

The Arthur Jacob nature reserve was named after the Arthur Jacob who was county Councillor for  Horton and Wraysbury and did much for the area.  He died  perhaps in the 1970s 

The Five  Bells:   

The  church had five bells up until the 1890s.  The church owned the Five Bell Public House and when it came to renew the lease it asked for a premium of £60. This was used to pay for the sixth bell which has a lengthy inscription for Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.

In the 1950s the bells were unringable. In 1960 my father E Christie Willatts spearheaded the restoration of the tower,  This involved having a concrete ring installed to support the bell  frame.  The bell frame was renewed and the bells rehung.  The turret was dismantled to about half way down and then rebuilt.  The clock face was repainted blue.  The simple wind vane arrow and  cardinal points was removed by the Rector The Revd T.D Prentis for repair, but it never was repaired or returned.


St Michael's West door

The west door of the church which may well be 15thC in age  - I have not examined it for many years  - was last used for the wedding c 1922 of   Dora Brown to Herbert Wiggins.  Dora Brown's father ran the village shop. In the 1940s and 50s it was run by her brother.  Herbert Wiggins was a  market gardener who lived halfway up the Colnbrook road, by the Halfway House PH, both farmhouse and pub and cottages behind were lost to the  Q M reservoir. The Browns retired to the house Osmington on the village Green.  Some of the Victorian stained glass from the farmhouse was brought down and installed in it. Dora lived there after the farmhouse was demolished.

The bombing of cottages in Park Lane in 1941.  

This was random dropping of bombs by returning German aircraft. The cottages in question were just over the stream at the far end of the lane.  Turn right at the end by the pair of cottages, go along the track for c 100  yards over the bridge and there was the site of the bombed cottages. At the time there were young evacuee boys living there - described by my father as the  sweetest boys you  could find.    Many years later he ensured that their names were on the village war memorial.

Champney Hall & playing field

 During the war and well into the 1950s there were Nissan huts on what is now the Recreation Ground next to the Champney Hall.  They were lived in in the 1950s.  The field behind was the place of the village sports for the Coronation.  I have the programme still.

Mr and Mrs Champney's home

Mr Champney and his wife Margaret  lived in the 18thC house enlarged in Edwardian times opposite the Green at the corner of Park lane.   After the death of his wife it became the Margaret Champney Nursing home.  From  1952 to c 1980 it was a home for retired gardeners run by the  Gardeners Royal Benevolent Fund. 

Some random comments.  Rosalind

  Out of interest I have an 1868 six inch map revised in the 1880s of Horton and Heathrow.   Very different then  when my great grandparents were farming Dairy Farm

1. Stanwell Road.  There was a long high concrete wall to the south side of the Stanwell Road by the  Arthur Jacob nature reserve.  THis meant the Stanwell road was always in the shade.  it was built to protect the public from the rifle range at Wraysbury.  The wall did not protect Dairy Farm in Coppermill Road from   stray bullets which was one reason why my great grandfather James Willatts, left Dairy Farm to farm in Wraysbury.
The Arthur Jacob nature reserve was named after the Arthur Jacob who was County Councillor for  Horton and Wraysbury and did much for the area.  He    died  perhaps in the 1970s 

2, The Five  Bells:   The  church had    five bells up until the 1890s.  The church owned the Five Bell PH and when it came to renew the lease it asked for a premium of £60. This was used to pay for the sixth bell which has a lengthy  inscription for Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.

In the 1950s the bells were unringable. In 1960 my father E Christie Willatts spearheaded the restoration of the tower,  This involved having a concrete ring installed to support the bell  frame.  The bell frame was renewed and the bells rehung.  The    turret was dismantled to about half way down and then rebuilt.  The clock face was repainted blue.  The simple wind vane arrow and  cardinal points was removed by the Rector  The Revd T.D Prentis for repair, but it never was repaired or returned.

The west door of the church  (this may well be 15thC in age  - I have not examined it for many years)  This was last used for the wedding c 1922 of   Dora Brown to Herbert Wiggins.  Dora Brown's father  ran the village shop. In the 1940s and   50s it was run by her brother.  Herbert Wiggins was a  market gardener who lived halfway up the Colnbrook road, by the Halfway House PH, both farmhouse and pub and cottages behind were lost to the  Q M reservoir. The Browns retired to the house Osmington on the village Green.  Some of the Victorian stained glass from the farmhouse was brought   down and installed in it. Dora lived there after the farmhouse was demolished.

The    bombing of Park Lane in 1941.  THis was random dropping of bombs by   returning German aircraft. The cottages in question were just over the stream at the far end of the lane.  Turn right at the end by the pair of cottages, go along the   track for c 100  yards over the bridge and there was the site of the bombed cottages. At the time there were young evacuee boys living there - described by my father as the  sweetest boys you  could find.    Many years later he ensured that their names were on the village war memorial.

During the war and well into the 1950s there were nissen huts on what is now the Recreation Ground next to the Champney Hall.  They were lived in in the 1950s.
The field behind was the place of the village sports for the Coronation.  I have the programme still.

Champney and his wife Margaret  lived in the 18thC house enlarged in Edwardian times opposite the Green at the corner of Park lane.   After the death of his wife it became the Margaret Champney Nursing home.  From  1952 t0 c 1980 it was a home for retired gardeners run by the  Gardeners Royal Benevolent Fund. 

 
On Saturday, 15 Jun 2024 at 20:47, Rosalind wrote:

You will by now have found the cast iron Cross I left at the church porch on Friday morning.. I found the array of crosses on the railings impressive, mostly from the 1890s.  This brings the number up to a dozen, which seems right  for my memories  of them in the churchyard in the 1950s.  What a lovely thing   for  them to have been found and restored.  They are special to Horton, and made in Horton.  I cannot recall any in Wraysbury churchyard.

I was most impressed by the size of the Tree of Heaven.  it is really large now.  It is of course now 50 years old.  I attach a note about this tree for the archives.

  While thinking of the churchyard I doubt if anyone now remembers the circumstances of the death of   Alan Shanks,  aged 9, whose marble gravestone with white marble angel ( it seemed smaller on Friday)   is up against the churchyard wall to the road.  It is still tended, but not with fresh flowers.  Alan lived in one of the row of cottages  just round the bend at the station end of Coppermill Road near Wraysbury Mill.   He was playing in a ditch nearby  when he cut his knee   on a piece of rusting metal.  The doctor in Wraysbury stitched up the wound.  But he developed  tetanus/sepsis and died.   At the time, mid 50s,  no one was really aware of tetanus.  Alan's death has made   me very aware of it and its dangers.


St Michael’s Churchyard, Horton

Tree of Heaven  (Ailanthus glandulosa)

The Tree of Heaven in the churchyard was planted in 1973 by Lady Janet  Young of the  Department of the Environment.  The D of E was having a campaign to plant trees, under the slogan Plant a  tree in seventy three. Lady Young was a cousin of Christie Willatts. He was a senior civil servant there (retired in 1973)

Plant a tree in 73;    Plant some more in 74

(Keep them alive in 75; chop them for sticks in 76).

In a storm in 1971 the great yew tree on the east side of the churchyard path fell down.  It was much bigger than the other yew tree alongside it and its branches swept densely to the ground.  Christie wanted to replace it with a specimen tree and was advised to have a Tree of Heaven (which he thought a suitable name for a churchyard). He was advised that this would be fast growing and resistant to pollution from overhead aircraft. He even travelled to Bath to see a specimen Tree of Heaven there in St James’s Square.

In time both the ashes of his wife Edna d. 1979 and himself d. 2000 were strewn at the foot of this tree.

Rosalind Willatts June 2024