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Moving to Chulsa
Moving to Chulsa
Moving to Chulsa
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Moving to Chulsa

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Funny, a little frightening but forever optimistic life would ‘shower him with love,’ Rob’s memoir has much to give.  A mixed-race lad in a working-class family growing up in the sixties on a housing estate in south-east London; life definitely had its challenges.  Rob’s young life experienced more than

LanguageEnglish
PublisherRobert Craggs
Release dateNov 25, 2019
ISBN9780648714514
Moving to Chulsa

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    Moving to Chulsa - Rob Craggs

    Foreword

    ‘Moving to Chulsa’ sounded so exotic and then I discovered it was a council estate in London, not so exotic after all but it was special for Rob Craggs.

    This is an emotional read; funny, sad and at times you’re scared for the child growing up amidst uncertainty, people coming and going and a boy just being a boy.

    However, there is a constant throughout, family.  Rob’s Mum and Sister and all these years later, that hasn’t changed.

    This story is very real, yes, ‘warts and all’ and other stuff but that’s for you to find out.

    There is another constant; Rob’s optimism that life would get better.  As he says, ‘Life can be hard but children are resilient and I had plenty of spirit.’  His story also reinforces the notion that pleasure can come from small, everyday things.  Some of those things will surprise you!

    When I finished reading the manuscript, I sent Rob an email with the comment ‘Oh my, I lived a sheltered life, thank goodness!’

    I also asked why his story finished when it did?  I felt there was more.  For him it was a fitting time to end but there is more to come and I look forward to the next instalment.

    Thank you Rob for asking me to work with you to turn your manuscript into your book.  It has been both a privilege and a pleasure.

    Claudette

    Foreword

    CHAPTER 1 — The Sun Does Shine

    CHAPTER 2 — As It Was and As It Is

    CHAPTER 3 — Davey

    CHAPTER 4 — Mum’s Background

    CHAPTER 5 — Bright Lights Of London

    CHAPTER 6 — Back Up North

    CHAPTER 7 — Fostering

    CHAPTER 8 — Peter

    CHAPTER 9 — Earls Court

    CHAPTER 10 — Malcolm Infants School

    CHAPTER 11 — Overcoming

    CHAPTER 12 — Going Up

    CHAPTER 13 — A Winner

    CHAPTER 14 — Miss XL

    CHAPTER 15 — As Best As Ever

    CHAPTER 16 — A Crack

    CHAPTER 17 — Italian Blood

    CHAPTER 18 — Assefa Berhane-Selassie

    CHAPTER 19 — Reverse Charges

    CHAPTER 20 — Heading North

    CHAPTER 21 — Stepping Into Agate

    CHAPTER 22 — Bobby

    CHAPTER 23 — Brother John

    CHAPTER 24 — Fight

    CHAPTER 25 — Second Biscuit

    CHAPTER 26 — Angela and Pat

    CHAPTER 27 — Pat and The Cop Shop

    CHAPTER 28 — Nola

    CHAPTER 29 — Audrey

    CHAPTER 30 — Mums and Stereos

    CHAPTER 31 — Kentwood Senior

    CHAPTER 32 — Clubs, Cigarettes and Gangs

    CHAPTER 33 — Chulsa Oak

    CHAPTER 34 — Dare

    CHAPTER 35 — Cwabby in the Cupboard

    CHAPTER 36 — Perverts

    CHAPTER 37 — World Cup

    CHAPTER 38 — Windfall and Change

    Acknowledgements

    CHAPTER 1 — The Sun Does Shine

    Mum says we might be moving to Chulsa.  Hearing this news is like hearing a long-awaited summer has arrived.  A summer without sunsets.  This isn't typical news; this is an announcement of beginning, a new life; a better life and I can already feel the sun shining on my skin.  I am ten, my sister Debbie is four and Mum who stands between us and the big world is thirty-one.  It’s spring 1969, a happy moment and a great place to begin my story.

    There I was, sitting in front of the big black-and-white TV watching Lost In Space, on a Tuesday afternoon.  Mum was in the kitchen.  She poked her head around the door.

    ‘We might be moving to a new house soon.’

    This got my attention, ‘Are we, where to?’

    'There's a housing estate down the road, it's called Chulsa.'

    'Chulsa?' 'Chulsa Estate?' I knew Chulsa, my best mates Paul Winston and Steve Hullett lived there.  I couldn’t wait to tell them!

    For four years we'd been living up in Crystal Palace Park Road, number 69. In its Victorian hey-day, it was a mansion house complete with servant quarters, owned by a rich merchant. Like all the other detached houses on that road, all the gardens backed onto the Crystal Palace Park.

    The town of Upper Norwood is by the top entrance of the park but everyone knows the area as Crystal Palace, so named after the Crystal Palace Exhibition.

    The Crystal Palace, otherwise known as The Great Exhibition, was a project of Prince Albert, Queen Victoria's husband; something to keep the young man busy while his wife ruled her empire.  Built by Joseph Paxton, the palace stood at Hyde Park for a few years from 1851 until it had run its course.  After that, the novelty was over.  Paxton struggled to keep his creation alive and found a perfect spot to transfer it, Upper Norwood in south-east London.  The structure remained there until a mysterious fire burned it down in 1936, twenty-eight years before we moved there.  The ruins of that old colossal white elephant belonged to another age.  And yet, here we roamed and played in its aftermath, just a handful of years later; separated from that different age where those ruins belonged, by a slim veil of time.

    The ruins are still there today, a reminder of a glorious past.  There are huge stone sphinx statues, magnificent rows of old stone steps, armless sculptured statues, all sandblasted and cleaned up but silent witnesses still.  If you go onto Trip Advisor and type in 'Crystal Palace' there are interesting writings and comments about the area; I feel honoured to have lived there for so long.  And let's not forget the Crystal Palace BBC Tower itself that towered into the sky above.  People can see it from miles around as it transmits its signals for BBC television and radio for the whole of South London.  Its original name was The Phoenix Tower named because the BBC built the tower on the ashes of a previous experimental structure, which burned down alongside the Palace.

    By the time we moved there, all the houses backing onto the park became a shadow of their former glory.  They were now in disrepair; time having swept away the former upper-middle-class life away.  Private landlords now owned them and rented out a few shabby rooms on each floor to poor working-class families.

    We lived on the top floor.  There were two families living on each floor with a shared toilet and bathroom.  Bath time in winter could not be more disagreeable, running across the cold landing on tiptoes to the cold silent bathroom.  Hot water seeped out from the Ascot gas hot water system to fill the bath to about 6 inches before turning cold again.  I lay in that shallow, lukewarm water as heat sucked through the cold enamel into the cool blue air; an ordeal I avoided by bathing as little as possible.  I'd be shivering in that bath, too cold to get out, till my fingers looked like crinkle cut chips.  By turning the tap on full for a few seconds with my toes and then turning it down to a trickle, I could get the water to come out scalding hot for all of twenty seconds.  Turn it down too much and the gas would turn off, rendering the water icy cold again.  After 40 minutes of fiddling, the bath was almost warm and maybe a quarter full.

    Sometimes, when I didn’t want to face the agony, I’d sit in the bathroom for ten minutes pretending to have a bath but Mum was onto me.

    'Eh, that was quick, come here let me see', a quick inspection.

    'You're not even wet, you haven't been in the bath.'

    'I did but I dried myself off.'

    'Well, your towel's dry and your ears are filthy, get over here to the kitchen sink.'

    Soapy hot water, Mum’s sharp fingernails, digging and scratching into my ears, scraping out filth.

    The several families living at number 69 represented the whole of the UK - English, Irish, Scottish and Welsh.  Not so many Welsh but Scots and Irish everywhere.  We all got along well enough; with us children playing, fighting and arguing until the sun set, day after day after day.  We’d scratch out Hopscotch grids into the hard dirt with small stones.  Paul and John and I would play soccer in the park, climbing over the garden fence into the no-man's area we’d named and claimed as our own Clay Island and then over the next fence into the park.  Debbie, my sister would be nearby and the Mitchells and Stewarts were always there.  Sometimes David and Simon Brown from next door joined us.

    In the park, we’d climb trees.  It could take weeks, maybe months for us to become strong enough to climb a young oak tree and once conquered we'd hunt for the next difficult tree challenge.  We play cowboys and indians and ride our imaginary horses around the garden area, improvising our story plots as the game progressed with wild suggestions.

    'I get attacked by Indians and get shot by an arrow in my shoulder,'

    'Yeh and I shoot him,'

    'Yeh but you miss and I shoot him,'

    'Yeh but you only get him in the arm and then I shoot him.'

    Our main thing in common was our united dislike for our landlord next door.  He was rich, we were poor, he was up, we were down, he was tall, we were short, he was straight, we were crooked, he spoke properly.  But he never forgot us at Christmas.  Every year he would leave a gift for us: colouring books and crayons, at each of our front doors late on Christmas Eve as if he were Santa himself.  I never appreciated his kindness back then; we took our cues from our parents.

    After living there a few years, Mr. Fairclough, tall, well built, with sandy grey hair and glasses, accepted an offer on his two properties, disappearing from our lives forever.

    Over the next several years private investors redeveloped those houses and sold them on the private market.  It was the reason we had to leave.  Today they are luxury apartments.  Even the basement, with the old dilapidated washroom, is now a one-bed luxury apartment.

    A few weeks before we moved onto Chulsa Estate, Mum, Deb and I, walked down from Crystal Palace Park Road, a three-minute walk, to view our future home; just the three of us.  Peter, Deb’s dad and my stepdad was away, which I didn't mind.

    Bromley Council hadn't arranged a home inspection or viewing for us.  Instead, they sent a letter in the post telling Mum a flat had become available.  So, we peered through the windows and the letter box.  ‘It's nice Mum, which bedroom are me and Deb going to have?’

    Mum didn't care; one or the other.  It was on the ground floor, bare, waiting for us to move in.  The most amazing thing of all? We would now have a toilet/bathroom which we wouldn't have to share with anyone.  It would be our own.  Our own self-contained home.  At last!

    There was a problem though.  What about Bushy our pet squirrel? I caught him one day walking home from school with my two best mates, Paul and Steve who were the reason I was so excited about moving to Chulsa.  They became my friends after my school transferred me midterm up to their 3b class, just after the Easter holidays in 1968.  Most days we walked home together from school.  They would part from me as we cut through Chulsa, which was where they lived and I would carry on up the road to my house.

    One Autumn day as we were cutting through Chulsa we stumbled across a baby squirrel a little way off from its mother at the back of George House.  We gave chase, not expecting to catch it but to my shock, I did.  This was a lottery win and I wasn’t letting go.  I wrapped it up in my jumper and took it home and told Mum that its mother had rejected it.  Mum surprised me, I thought she'd tell me off but she didn't.  I think she liked my little find, so Bushy, named after its bushy tail, joined our family.  Bad move? Yes; but try telling that to an 11-year-old boy!

    Bushy adapted to us and was a lot of fun.  We assumed him to be a boy as he often fought his reflection whenever he came near a mirror.  He pooed everywhere but it was dry and if it bothered Mum, she never mentioned it.  He slept in my anorak, which I hung on the living room door.  He ripped out the lining in the left arm and padded out a sleeping area for himself.  I’m not sure if my anorak smelled squirrel or not but I wore it to school every day after ejecting the poor creature from his home.  When he wasn't asleep, he was hunting for food and he loved peanuts, which he held with his two hands to gobble down.  A peanut might not sound much but imagine holding a peanut the size of a rugby ball and polishing it off in one go.

    Mum sometimes had parties at our house and Tam, one of Mum’s friends, often came to them until he punched Mum in the ribs and his company was no longer required.  I’m sure he didn’t mean it; he was usually a lot of fun to be around but he could be possessive with Mum.

    Anyway, one night before things turned sour between them, Mum had a few friends over in the evening.  They were drinking and carrying on and Tam was sitting in the chair by the door arguing with someone; a friendly drunken brawl.  All the noise must have woken Bushy, who came out of his anorak nest to investigate.  Then, with one jump he pounced and landed straight onto Tams baldhead.  Everyone froze, not only by the sudden sight of Bushy sitting on Tam's head but also by Tam's alarmed expression.  He didn't know what had happened.  No-one knew we had a squirrel! Mum burst out laughing and then, as realisation swept around the room, each of them, one by one, erupted into thunderous roars, even Tam.

    Boy, I miss Bushy.  Bromley Council's firm policy, was, 'No pets' on Chulsa Estate! Humbly accepted without question.  We didn't consider that Bushy wouldn’t able to defend himself in the wild.  We didn't think to ask any of our neighbours if they'd like a pet squirrel.  So, the day before we left Crystal Palace Park Road.  I took Bushy down to the garden and told him we were leaving and he couldn't come with us.

    I walk toward a tree in the garden, all the time explaining to Bushy he has to go.  I’m crying.  When I put my cupped hands up to the trunk, I hope that he might shy away and bury himself in my shoulder.  Instead, he takes off up the trunk of the tree and doesn't look back.

    A few months later some of our old neighbours tell us that Bushy keeps coming back up the balcony and they often feed him but I never see him again, nor do I ever look back; Chulsa Estate is calling me and I turn away from what has been a beautiful and unusual experience.

    CHAPTER 2 — As It Was and As It Is

    Today, Chulsa Estate is a clean, leafy green housing estate with a 90% home ownership.  All thanks to Maggie Thatcher and the Conservative Party's 'Right to Buy' policy, which welcomed the poorer working classes into the real estate club.

    This started back in the mid-eighties.  Working-class people living on council estates weren't upwardly mobile with professional jobs, striped ties and eggshell-veneered business cards.  But they could now take charge of their destiny and achieve the new English dream of home ownership.  Well, that's what we thought.  Home ownership may have increased but no-one appeared to be in control of anything, let alone destiny.

    My mum’s one of the few people on the estate who still rents.  We could have bought her flat with a 70% discount but I'm glad we didn't go ahead.  I'm not keen on doing business with family despite it being a way of getting ahead.

    I didn’t realise it but compared to other housing estates, Chulsa was and is, a pearl.  Set among oak, chestnut and holly trees, the flats are only four storeys’ high, are not imposing and the grass areas have always been well-maintained.

    Green shrubbery now replaces the broken bicycle sheds with the battered and paint peeled doors and the council has revamped the rotten garbage areas and modernised the

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