Recently by James Shepherd
MANY people will mourn the passing of Woolworths with the sad closure of its stores in Nantwich and Sandbach. But it also revives memories of when Woolies was a feature of Crewe's shopping centre.
Over recent years, people have often said what Crewe town centre needed was a branch of Woolworths.
But back in the 1960s, F W Woolworth and Co was one of the main stores in town with a flourishing branch in Market Street opposite the junction with Earle Street.
The large branch, across the road from the corner where the Adelphi public house once stood, is shown in a couple of pictures in the Crewe Memory Lane series of books by retired Chronicle photographer Gordon Davies, including one from 1962.
Back in those heady days of the 60s, the big brown counters at Woolworths stocked practically everything - usually cheaper than anywhere else - and in more recent years it was still a big draw for many.
Former Chronicle journalist Mark Smith, who now writes the excellent Northerner column for the guardian.co.uk weekly digest of the best of the Northern press, is one with fond memories. He wrote: "Being in Nantwich this Christmas, will have further significance for me: it will be the last chance I get to shop at the local Woolies.
"The town has so far remained defiant in the face of galloping chain store procurement, but Woolies was the exception. In fact, until I was about 11, I thought it was Nantwich's very own. Then I saw a Woolies in Inverness, and wished I could tell my late nan that there was another - she loved Woolies.
"My nan practically raised me, and I swear that, every single day in every summer holiday at primary school, she took me to Woolies. There would always be something she wanted, or something she wanted to get me, or something I wanted her to get me. We practically lived there. I fear her passing may also have sounded the death knell for Woolworths Nantwich."
Copies of the Crewe Memory Lane books by Gordon Davies are on sale at the Crewe Chronicle office including the final one, Volume Six, offered at a reduced price of £6.99.
DID you know that cobwebs were once used to heal cuts? Or that the Victorians believed that allowing mice to run up the spine would cure a bad back?
Or perhaps you remember layers of goose grease, a red flannel and a liberty bodice to ease coughs and colds?
Chester Grosvenor Museum's new exhibition - Kill or Cure: Medicines & Remedies - which runs until February 22 takes visitors back in time to explore the medicines and remedies of bygone times, be they strange, sensational or perfectly sensible.
Try and imagine a time without newspapers, television dramas set in hospitals or neatly packaged medicines.
It was a time when ignorance and/or illiteracy meant most people failed to understand exactly what made them ill, never mind what could make it better.
Add in the serious diseases of history, be they the more distant plagues or more recent influenza epidemics, and you get a climate of fear and uncertainty and a willingness to try almost anything to protect that precious commodity of good health.
Using original objects, fun interactives and oral histories, this exhibition explores the often astounding but always ingenious ways that we have sought to cure ourselves of our ills.
Entry to the exhibition is free and the gallery is fully accessible.
PEGGY WOODCOCK looks back on 40 years of Chester's inimitable Gateway Theatre.
I remember the Gateway stage rippling with water for a stunning production of Pinter's emotive play Betrayal.
On the same stage I once talked to acting legends Pauline Collins, of Shirley Valentine fame, and John Alderton, currently in BBC's Little Dorrit.
These hugely successful actors memorably made clear the value they placed on small venues like the Gateway, and their determination to give support.
I remember children squealing and laughing through Charlotte's Web, Jungle Book and other Christmas productions, some of which went on to other theatres.
There was the youthful Hamlet writing red graffiti on dazzling white walls. Not for me, but, away from the classroom, a teenage audience was actually enjoying Shakespeare!
The Chronicle campaign is rightly focusing on the present, pressing for a re-opened Gateway as a way of redressing the dire situation existing for the arts in the city centre.
The strong case is being argued on these pages. Maybe some snapshots from the past will help to bolster it, to remind everyone what an asset the Gateway was to the city.
I helped report the Gateway from the early nineties, when the theatre created its own productions of wide-ranging plays like the shocking, brave, gay Torch Song Trilogy, the happy Yorkshire-set Second from Last in the Sack Race, the passionate Wuthering Heights, the thriller Night Must Fall.
Artistic director Jeremy Raison, now at Glasgow Citizens Theatre, attracted talent like actor Patrick Robinson, Ash in Casualty and then the first black Heathcliff in Chester. He went on to Stratford, is now in the TV drama Survivors.
Raison brought in household names, like Michael le Vell, Coronation Street's Kevin Webster, making his first foray into theatre as the sinister Dan in Night Must Fall.
It brought the national press to the Gateway as, later, did heavyweights Dennis Waterman, Patrick Mower and the late Ned Sherrin, when they made our theatre the first stop for their scriptwriter comedy Bing Bong.
The theatre commanded respect within the industry and helped talent grow.
And it entertained as Raison upped audience figures to more than 84% and brought a prestigious regional theatre award to the Gateway. He gave us rock and roll summers with great shows like Three Steps to Heaven, which twice went on to national tours.
I remember the relief of crucial Arts Council funding and the welcome arrival of pink seats from the Mayflower, Southampton - second-hand but such comfort! - and of Deborah Shaw, a talented director who made a success of the recent mammoth Complete Works of Shakespeare Festival in Stratford.
Passionate about the Gateway, she promised "the best of theatre, what Chester deserves and should have" and delivered with treats like a delightful Alice in Wonderland, a clever Vanity Fair and a lively version of the Hitchcock thriller Marnie.
Sadly the Gateway ceased as a producing theatre but went on delivering entertainment as a venue for visiting companies, stand-ups and other performers.
I remember laughter with Maria Gibb as a comic Joyce Grenfell, Aussie Caroline Reid, naughty as trolly dolly PamAnn, and Rodney Bewes, a delight in Three Men and a Boat.
And the fun of Hull Truck's nightclub Bouncers and football Perfect Pitch.
Colin Baker boomed through The Haunted Hotel and Rula Lenska shocked, well, some of the audience, in The Vagina Monologues.
I remember the pathos of Trestle's masked Stoneheads and the drama of death, bagpipes and Edinburgh Castle on stage for Tunes of Glory.
Soap stars came: Steven Pinder (Brookside) in Dial M for Murder, Chloe Newsome (Corrie) in Pride and Prejudice, and Scarlet Johnson (Eastenders) as Daisy Miller.
Rani Moorthy cooked curry on the same stage where, years earlier, Sunny Ormonde, as Shirley Valentine, had memorably fried chips and egg.
So many local societies entertained with opera and musical theatre, like Tip Top Productions, now keeping the Forum Studio alive.
It was here I watched school kids engrossed in a dark, mini Macbeth, and the marvellous Iestyn Edwards reduce his mini audience to tears of laughter as ballerina Madame Galactica.
You will all have your own memories of the Gateway, of productions that have made you sad, made you laugh, made you think, enriched your life.
But like me you will remember arriving to a crowded foyer buzzing with anticipation for the entertainment ahead, whatever it may be - this same foyer where once, earlier in the day, you may well have had a coffee or a sandwich lunch.
Great days. Let's get them back!
THIS photograph taken of Boughton St Paul's primary school taken in the late forties may jog a few memories.
Mrs Jean Wells, Glamis Close, Vicars Cross submitted the black and white picture taken after she found it lying around the house.
Mrs Wells hopes that former classmates may recognise themselves and help her solve the riddle of the people in the picture taken 60 years ago.
She said: "Does anybody recognise themselves in my picture? It was taken in Boughton Chester 1948-49 I think it was possibly a May Day celebration but I am not quite sure. She added: "My name was Jean Graham in 1949."
If you can identify any faces or have any information about the photograph contact The Chronicle on 01244 606416
Tackling rowdy behaviour, disorderly conduct and the alcohol abuse is high on the Government's agenda at the moment.
And it was just the same for residents living around Upton Village Hall during the Second World War.
In 1942, four residents living near the hall, on Mill Lane, complained about the disorderly conduct of certain people attending late dances and the consumption of intoxicating drinks on the premises. The correspondents suggested imposing a closing hour of midnight on all users of the hall.
Despite complaints, the majority of local people seem to have appreciated the facilities.
Upton Village Hall celebrates its 80th anniversary this month, having been officially opened in December 2008 by Lady Arthur Grosvenor.
The hall's history has been chronicled since the early 1920s and a scrapbook containing circulars, programmes, notices and press cuttings up until 1984 was lodged with Cheshire and Chester Archives.
An inventory of gifts was kept, including a kitchen geyser from Mr A Crompton, the first chairman, a gramophone and records from Mr W Clayton and five dozen teaspoons engraved 'UVH' from Mrs C Newport.
Phil Pearn, chairman of the village hall committee, said: "Unfortunately all the spoons are missing so if anyone has one in a drawer at home please could they let us know."
Other titbits from the minutes include, in June 1931, the cricket club agreeing to give a length of matting to the hall in return for two free nights for dances.
Maintenance of the hall didn't come cheap and a minute from 1952 records the purchase of a vacuum cleaner costing £25. With the average salary just topping £100 per annum, it would be the equivalent of spending about £5,000 of today's money to keep the place clean.
In 1953 the conduct of the youth club was considered to be unsatisfactory and the vicar was to be informed.
Earlier this year local resident George Bolton confessed to getting into dances free back in the 40s and 50s.
One of his gang would get in on a ticket and then let the others in through the window.
The village hall underwent a major refurbishment during the 1980s under the chairmanship of Nancy Turton, described in the minutes as a 'young, ambitious, enterprising, energetic and keen chairman'.
Nancy is still a trustee of the village hall. The hall has recently undergone another refurbishment, in a project named 4-SCORE and it now boasts a new kitchen and bar area, a new side entrance with toilet giving better access to the meeting room, increased storage space and a new sound system.
An exhibition celebrating the 80 year history will be mounted this Sunday, December 7 from 2 - 5pm at the village hall.
A FOOTBALL match played this week held historical significance for those who gave their lives in the 1914-1918 Great War.
Thirty officers and soldiers from the Chester-based 1st Battalion The Royal Welsh (Royal Welch Fusiliers) played a football match in Frelinghien, France, to commemorate a brief time of peace that occurred on the first Christmas Day of the First World War.
The Royal Welch Fusiliers met their German opponents, the Saxons of the 133 Infantry Regiment and the Prussians of the 6 Jager Battalion, in no- man's-land for an impromptu game of football on what was a rare day of peace on Christmas Day, 1914.
Captain C I Stockwell, who was present at the original Truce, wrote an account of the events on "one of the most curious Christmas Days" he had ever experienced.
He describes the singing, cheering and the exchanging of beer that took place. However, after this one night of peace and festivity, the fighting was resumed the next day.
Captain Stockwell recalls: "The German captain and I both saluted. He fired two shots in the air, and the war was on again".
The football match this week was played on the site of the original Truce game. The opposing team comprised members of the German Army's Panzergrenadier Battalion 371, formed from the Saxon Infantry, who originally played in 1914.
British soldiers attended the unveiling of a Christmas Truce Memorial in the town. This Memorial displays the badges of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers, the Saxon infantry and the Prussian Jager. They also took part in a Service of Remembrance before the football match, taking part in a two minute silence.
The Commanding Officer of The Royal Welsh 1st Battalion, Lt Col Nick Lock, said: "We are delighted to be taking part. The Christmas Truce illustrated the basic humanity of the men from both sides engaged in that terrible conflict."
Cheshire airfields had a massive hand to play in the Second World War, according to leading World War II historian, Aldon Ferguson.
At the height of of the Second World War, Cheshire had nine operational airfields, with six of them purpose-built to aid the war effort at Calveley, Stretton, Poulton, Cranage, Little Sutton and Tatton Park, while airfields at Ringway, Hooton Park and Woodford were already in existence.
These nine airfields were used by the Royal Air Force and many war-time fighters and bombers were built, while thousands of pilots, navigators and paratroopers were also trained according to the book Cheshire Airfields of The Second World War.
The book explains in depth what has happened to all nine of the airfields since the war, with only two of the sites, Ringway and Woodford still operating.
The other seven have been built over or returned to the quiet fields that they once were, with a corner of the old Cranage airfield now lying under the M6.
Detailed research takes the reader through the action during the conflict that took place at the airfields during the war, including the construction of an aircraft that was amazingly assembled in just 24-hours, before having a successful test flight within just 45 minutes.
The book also describes how the airfields helped to protect Manchester and the docks at Birkenhead and Liverpool and how training at the airfields directly affected the D-Day Landings.
Mr Ferguson has also obtained access to several interesting photographs which help the reader to picture what the airfields looked like in the early forties.
PHOTOGRAPHS OF Newtown including this image of Christ Church school (above) are jogging a few memories.
The photographs form part of an exhibition called Newtown Remembered at Chester History and Heritage Centre until November 29. It features pictures and memories of the area, from the 1920s onwards.
Christ Church School, which opened in 1842, is now home to Chester Little Theatre.
If you have photographs or memories to add to the exhibition, e-mail Elaine Pierce Jones at Chester History & Heritage at e.pierce-jones@ chester.gov.uk or telephone 01244 402110.
A GOLDEN couple are looking for some of their old friends.
Ray and Brenda Harper were married on November 15 1958 at Holy Trinity Church in Chester (now the Guildhall) and will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary next month.
They have sent The Chronicle this picture, taken after their wedding, with the combined choirs of Holy Trinity Church and St Chad's Church, Blacon (now Holy Trinity Without-the-Walls).
Ray was organist and choirmaster at Holy Trinity and Brenda sang in the choir at St Chad's. Brenda also sang in the Chester Ladies' Choir and is now the longest serving member of that choir. Ray is now principal organist at St Werburgh's RC Church in Chester.
The couple, who now live in Highfield Road, Blacon are keen to hear from any of the choir members who sang on their special day.
They know that two of those pictured have sadly died but if you recognise yourself or anyone in the photograph please reply to this post.
CHESTER'S last city centre school is on the move. St Mary's Nursery School, on St Mary's Hill, will up sticks in December and move from its site within the city walls to a new site in Handbridge.
Past pupils, parents, staff and friends are invited to celebrate the school's history on Thursday, October 23, from 4-7pm at the St Mary's Hill site.
Headteacher Ken Jones said: "We look forward to celebrating the part this building has played in our community and then 162 years of history will be packed into our bags and moved across the river."
From January the nursery school will be rehoused on the site of Overleigh St Mary's CE Primary School in Old Wrexham Road.
The school was established in 1846 to provide religious education for the poor of the large inner city parish of St Mary's. A reorganisation of city schools in 1972 meant St Mary's became a nursery school and it has provided pre-school education for three and four-year-olds across the city since then.
It has an active PTA group, called the Friends of St Mary's Nursery School, which regularly raises money for extra curricular activities including school trips, equipment and the annual Fair Day in May.
In 2002, the group organised a "street" party for parents to celebrate the Queen's Golden Jubilee.
The celebration will include an exhibition of the history of the school and organisers are keen to hear from anyone with any photographs or memories.
Alternatively visitors on the day will be able to add their memories to a memory book.
There will be light refreshments, provided by the Friends of St Mary's, and at 6pm, there will be speeches, a cake and a toast to mark the past and look forward to the future of this school.









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