The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds nature reserve at Minsmere, is part of the Suffolk Coast and Heaths area of outstanding natural beauty and the Suffolk Heritage Coast.
It seems an odd mix now that, during the 1960s Mumberry Hills which is part of the reserve, was used for motor cycle scramble racing.
One of the events was a hill climb, when riders raced in pairs up a steep incline. In 1964 the BBC Saturday afternoon sports programme “Grandstand” broadcast live coverage of racing from there.
Scramble racing, now called “Moto-Cross” took place on private and farmland on several locations locally, often close to housing.
Another subject featured this week is an Ipswich day nursery with a reader’s photographs of life there in the 1950s.
Mrs Mary Bloomfield, a reader from Martlesham, has recalled the Montrose Day Nursery, Ipswich, and has sent photographs from her time there in the 1950s. I was a student at the Montrose Day Nursery, Rosehill Crescent, Ipswich, from 1953 to 55, before I went on my general nurse training.
It was in a large converted house with an enormous garden. The nursery was then run by the Ipswich Public Health Department. It had a matron (Miss Manchester) a sister, four staff nurses and eight students in training.
There was also a full time gardener, a cook and a cleaner, although, as students, we did most of the cleaning and washing.
The nursery could accommodate about 60 children between the ages of six weeks and five years and was open from 7.30am until 6pm, five days a week.
The children were nearly all from single parentage - there were no state hand outs in those days and so a parent had to go out to work to support their child.
The children were very well looked after, having three meals a day prepared by the cook. Most of the fruit and vegetables were grown on the premises. I am not sure when the nursery closed.
A reader from Ipswich, Sylvia Brightwell Johnson, also wrote in.
The area around Copleston Road, School, Ipswich, featured recently including a small corner shop in Freehold Road.
Apart from World War Two, when I was serving in the Auxiliary Territorial Service, my entire life was spent in the Freehold Road area of Ipswich. I remember all of the buildings featured.
The door at the end of the Off Licence was the entry to the bottle and jug department. I often took a bottle in there asking for “a pint of fourpenny and please rinse the bottle out”, this was for my father - not me.
My parents bought their first house with the help of the Freehold Land Society. My mother struggled to save half a crown (12.5p) a week for a deposit, such an achievement considering my father only earned approximately £10 a week to keep himself, wife and four children, plus rent, gas etc. There were no benefits in those days.
Prior to World War Two there were at least seven shops along Freehold Road, plus other shops in the side roads, including fish and chip shops.
The supermarkets meant the demise of the small shops and changed friendly neighbourhoods forever.
I started work in 1936, aged 14, working 48 hours a week with a wage of seven shillings and 10 pence (about 38p).
Todays workers, as Prime Minister Harold Macmillan said in 1957, “most of our people have never had it so good”.
Do the subjects featured this week prompt memories for you? To submit a letter, in less than 300 words, write to David Kindred, Days Gone By, Ipswich Star/EADT, Portman House, 120 Princes Street, Ipswich, IP1 1RS or e-mail info@kindred-spirit.co.uk
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