Lancaster
Literature Festival
An annual festival of writing events plus community writing projects
throughout the year
The
Spotlight Club
For details of upcoming events visit our events page
Local Writers Details of locally-based writers and editors
2:
An Ordinary Town
The varieties of lechery, murder, violence, child abuse, thieving, racketeering,
hypocrisy, double-dealing, deception, profiteering, low wages, long
hours, sackings, cheatings, lying, one-upmanship, connivings, corruption
and two-facedness which Michael Watson knew and heard about during his
Lancaster childhood probably still thrive. The majority of local people
still live their ordinary lives, with their usual loving kindness often
taken for granted, their good deeds rarely publicised. Its not good
news that sells newspapers!
After he'd moved away, in 1951, Michael used to go back home every few
weeks. His journey would be by steam train. He’d catch the 6.30 p.m.
from London Euston. There would be many Irish passengers, going on to
Heysham, to make the overnight crossing to Ireland on the boat the Duke
of Lancaster.
His parents would be at Lancaster Castle Station, waiting for his arrival.
His father of medium height, a stocky figure, was still dark-haired,
bright blue-eyed, peering through the steam from the engine, looking
for "Our Michael".
Grabbing his suitcase, after a powerful handshake, it was, "Come on
lad, hurry yourself up -- we might catch the last L6 bus!"
The briefest of pecks on his mother's cheek and they were off. Dad handed
in their platform tickets and Michael had his return-ticket snipped
by the ticket-collector.
Out of the Castle Station entrance, ignoring the taxis, "Too expensive
for the likes of us!" he'd stride off up the incline, over the bridge,
down the hill, along China Street, down another hill to the bus-station.
Just in time to see the red Ribble bus disappearing down Cable Street,
past the old baths towards Parliament Street.
"Never mind lad, it's not far to walk!"
Off again along St. George's Quay, up countless steps and over Carlisle
Bridge, across Morecambe Road, up the hill, a short-cut past the prefabs
and down the top of Sefton Drive, before turning right into their street,
next to the Crows Wood.
Michael was just over six feet tall but he could not match his shorter
father’s longer stride. His poor mother was soon quite out of breath.
"I don't know what all the hurry is, Gordon. I can’t keep up with you.
I'm trying to have a word with our Michael."
Undeterred, Gordon marched ever onwards, still carrying Michael’s heavy
case. All Gordon’s life he had had races to be won, self-imposed targets
to be achieved. He never had much to show for all of his efforts, except
some personal satisfaction. At the end of the day, perhaps that’s all
that matters.
"15 minutes! We did it in 15 minutes!" he cried triumphantly, plonking
the suitcase down and glancing at his watch, before taking out his front
door key and letting them in.
He pushed Michael and his mother ahead up the hall, past the papier
mache bowl on a stand, the one Michael had made at junior school.
"We are just as soon as the bus, seeing as how we'd have had to walk
from Scale Hall Lane. And we saved on the bus-fares!
"Now come on Margaret, make us a nice cup of tea. Michael will be tired
after that long journey!" "Not to mention the long, knackering walk!"
thought Michael. But he kept that to himself. It was only too easy for
he and his Dad to start arguing about something or, more usually, about
nothing!
Many years passed, and Michael prospered. In 1983, it was more than
20 years since he'd been on a train. He had his own car. He decided
firmly to go to Lancaster alone. He'd leave the family at home. They
lived out in the country but his wife had a vehicle too. She wouldn't
be left in lonely isolation.
He needed some time on his own, time to go and find a part of himself
all over again. Time to explore the foreign country of his past.
He drove to Lancaster in just over five hours, parked near the railway
station and booked into the Castle Hotel, on China Street. It was great
to be greeted by the old familiar local accents of the landlady and
a chatty customer.
Michael lay awake most of the night, contemplating his first impressions
and what they had told him. In some ways the place had been transformed.
He recalled how it had been when he'd lived in Lancaster's, Edward Street,
in the far away time before the Second World War...
ABOUT THE WRITER
Bill Jervis was born in St. Thomas's Place, Lancaster in 1933 but his first
memories are of his home in Edward Street and then Bowland Drive. Schools attended:
St. Anne's, Edward Street; St.Mary's, on The Quay; Ryelands Junior School and
the Grammar School.
Bill Jervis on Heysham Head in 1953
Before leaving the area for National Service, he was employed briefly at Heysham
Towers Holiday Camp as a washer-upper and waiter, as a postman in Lancaster,
as a bus-conductor at Morecambe etc.
Most of his life after National Service and teacher-training, has been spent
in Norfolk, where he lives in retirement pursuing many hobbies and with a very
full social life.
Married, with three children, he and Nancy hope to celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary, in 2004.
He is an artist who has painted consistently and written, mainly poetry, for
over 50 years and is at present engaged on a many-volumed autobiography, already
more than 2000 pages long, in which he is trying to celebrate the lives of
many friends who have touched his life along the way.
MORE STORIES... FACES AND PHASES Our weekly serial of old
Lancaster by Bill Jervis
SHORT STORIES
The Devil's
Paradise by Jim Barton A
satirical, cruel but true, view of life in Lancaster in the 1980s... fond memories. R.A.D.
Do Skerton Bus Stop by Mollie Baxter If only arts funding was
always this much fun! • Tea with
Oolin by Mollie Baxter Alien encounters over a cup of Earl
Grey, hot. The Miracle
Worker by Charmian Coates Shenangians in a Blackpool pub have
unexpected results. •
Evacuees by Bill Jervis A schoolboys' pitched
battles on Padfields, Lancaster, in 1944 remembered. Snapshots by
Bill Jervis A chance encounter brings back
memories of wartime Morecambe.