Volume Two

Summary, Reviews, Index

Words and Pictures from a vanished era

each of these hardback volumes is complete in itself 

In this the second volume of Unforgotten Exmoor, four more venerable characters, all Exmoor born-and-bred, share their life stories and photographs.

Joan Hooper (nee Davis) was born in the Porlock Vale and had eleven brothers and sisters. Her father was a carter and her mother took in washing.

For the first ten years of her life she shared a bedroom with her grandmother who in her youth had gone from house to house collecting for the Crimean war.  One of Joan’s earliest memories was of collecting dirty laundry from all the hotels with her Grandma and then helping her mother with the hand washing.

On leaving school she went into service as an under lady’s-maid to the Pilcher family, and tells of her responsibilities and experiences in their grand London and Porlock homes.

When war broke out she married, and with just a few sheep in a borrowed field and by ‘going halves’ with the owner of the field, she and her husband gradually built up an entire flock and enough capital to take on Bromham farm at the top of Porlock hill, where they spent the rest of their working days.

In the second chapter Barbara Durman (nee Canning) tells how she was brought up by Dr Head the Rockford doctor and his wife, when her own mother died just two weeks after she was born.  She describes in great detail the day to day life of a remote rural doctor travelling everywhere on foot with his doctor’s bag in the days before the National Health service was set up.

She talks about growing up during the war years, about American servicemen on Exmoor and their jeeps, and about trips to Wales in the paddle steamers which stopped at Lynmouth.  She tells of black-outs and home guard exercises on neighbouring farms, and of dancing in the back corridor at the Rockford Inn to war songs played on a wind-up gramophone.

Above all though, she gives an inspiring and life-affirming account of the vibrant community living in Rockford at the time.

Ivy Archer (nee Lock) was born on a farm above Brendon at the beginning of the first world war and can remember a time before motor vehicles had arrived in the area.

She talks of an endless stream of visitors to the farm, peddlers and gypsies on foot, tradesmen and neighbouring farmers on ponies, and of course well-to-do holiday-makers who were collected from Lynton railway station by her father in a horse and trap and who stayed in the main farmhouse while she and her family lived in the adjoining cottage.

She provides vivid descriptions of how her family saw to the holiday-makers’ every need in a house without electricity where all water had to be collected in buckets from the stream outside and heated inside over an open fire, and where the toilet was a board with a hole in it suspended over the same stream further down the hill.

She talks about her father, a well known singer whose hand-written song book was started in the 1890s and is only now being seen for the first time outside the family. It has a number of Exmoor versions of carols and songs, two of which appear to be completely unknown in the national collections.

Ivy’s account starts more than a hundred years ago and ends in the second world war when she became a land girl.

The final chapter is about Jim Sanders, farmer, singer and diarist who for  sixty years recorded the details of day-to-day life on his remote hill farm.

His chapter begins with extracts from one of these diaries following the course of events for a full year. These entries are recorded in single sentences, entirely without comment, and with equal weight given to both the momentous and the mundane, and gradually build up to give a vivid insight as to how things actually were, and the shape that each farming year took through the seasons.

He tells of his taciturn father who was gassed in the first war, of ploughing, mowing and tilling with heavy horses, of haystack building and thatching, of hedging, trapping and weed pulling, and of course he tells of the choirs and all the singing, the singing for which he has such a reputation so widely over Exmoor.

Unforgotten Exmoor Volume Two:
ISBN Number 978-1-7397944-0-8

REVIEWS

Historic Voices of Exmoor

 

Unforgotten Exmoor is the second volume in a series of the social history of ordinary folk in a part of the world that most of us have forgotten or will never know. Reflecting on their ordinary lives, their stories are extraordinary, evoking a deeply nostalgic and affectionate portrait of bygone days in pre-war Exmoor.

Life might have been tougher then – far tougher – for the likes of Ivy Archer, Barbara Durman, Joan Hooper and Jim Sanders, but, as each tells their tale, there’s always the feeling that it was somehow better, less complicated, more in tune with the rhythms of the land…

READ FULL REVIEW

To purchase from outside the UK
or to collect 
in person from Porlock

please make contact  here

Family names Index – Volume Two

Adams, Maude, actress

Antell – Abe, shepherd

Archer, Charles, Ivy

Ash, Bill, Connie, Phyllis

Badgworthy Land Company

Back, David

Bailey – Alice, Elizabeth, Fred, Granny

Baker, nurse

Bale, Miss

Barrie JM

Barrow, Alice

Barwick, Mr

Beesley – Josie, Mary, Marion

Bell, Fred

Bennett, Jack

Bland, Mr

Bowden – Charley, George

British Legion

Bromham, Fanny

Budd, Miss

Burgess (Porlock Baker) roasting turkeys

Burnal, Fred

Campbell’s Steamers

Canning, – Ada, Albert, Barbara, Cyril, Eileen, Fred, Jean, William John

Chadwick-Healy

Cobbam’s Air Display

Cockman, Mr

Cox – Miss, teacher, Mrs, Allerford teachers

Crocombe, Alice

Davis – Alfred, Jack, Walter, Philip, Joe

Delbridge

Diamond, Ron

Dorothy, Aunt

Dyke, Miss (Brendon teacher)

Egg Marketing Board

Floyd – Edith, Florrie, Mrs, Phyllis

Foster, Dr

French – Ada, Albert, Avis, Dick

Graham, Mrs, George, Margaret

Gulliford, Elizabeth

Harper, Frank

 

 

Harrod’s cheque

Head – Dr Arthur, Anne, Timothy, Francis

Hearts of Oak

Hooper – April, Delwyn, Don, Pat

Hoyles, Travell

Hughes, Mrs

Ivy, Miss

Jenkins, Rex (Brendon vicar)

Jones, Len

Kelly, a peddler

Kelly’s directory

Kipper, Fatty

Knight, Frederick

Knights, owners of Exmoor

Lady Lovelace

Lang, Mr

Latham, Dick

Leaworthy, Fred

Licentiate of the Society of Apothecaries

Lethaby, Ted, Wilf

Lewis, Anne

Lewis, C S

Lliptons

Llewelyn-Davis, Sylvia

Lock – Bill, Evelyn, George, Harry, Ivy, Thomas, Tom, Victor

Lorna Doone

MacCracken, George

Mayforce, Mary

Medway, Mr

Midget men

Molland – Arthur, George, Helen, Stanley

Moore, Granfer

Moore, TH

Mountain, Sir Edward

Nancekivell, Mr

National Health Trust

Nercombe, Miss

Nightingale, Dr

Old Mother Scrumpy

Palmer, Mr

 

Palmer’s Diaries

Pattern – Mrs, Head of Brendon school

‘Peter Pan’

Pettet, Mr, vet

Pierce, Elsie, Roy

Pilcher – Lady, Miss Judith, Sir Gonne

Pile – Ada, George, Rosie

Piper, Tony

Pugsley (family name)

Punch and Judy

Quennell (architect)

Rawle, Mr

Red Cross

Reed, Farmer

Richards – Mr, ARP warden, Sam, Stanley

Ridd, Dick

Romany family

Sanders – Ada, Arthur, Annie, Colin, Jim, Nellie, Owen

Sandhurst

Scripture Inspector

Sedman, Amy

Shapland, Mrs

Squires, Evelyn

Summers, Gordon, game dealer

Tattersall, Gran, Jean

Thomas, Ethel

Thorn, Mrs, cook at Lynch

Tossel, Mr and Mrs

Trumps, Barnstaple

Tucker, Percy

Turner, Mr

Turpin, Randolf

Upstone, Mr (Porlock hardware van)

Vegas, Mr and Mrs

Vellacott, John

Vowles, photographer

Watts, Bert

Webster, Annie, George

Wendy House

Westcott – Cyril, Ella, George

Whitehair, William, teacher

Williams

Places and General Index –  Volume Two

A39 road

ARP warden

Alderford cottage

Allerford cottages, school

American soldiers

Ash Heap (field name)

Ash Plain

Ashford

Ashton farm

Barbrook, harvest tea

Barnstaple – fair, grammar school

Barton steep, wood

Bearded Lady

Beggar’s Roost

‘Blackbird’ (song)

Blackmoor gate

Blue Ball

Bodley range cooker

Bossington – cottage, farm, lime kilns

Brendon – church, Home Guard, Manor, pony show, school-house

Brendon Barton – cottage, farm

Bridge Ball

Bridgwater

Bristol

Bromham farm – tenancy, plain (field name)

Broomstreet farm

Buckfastleigh

Bude

Burgess, (Porlock baker) roasting turkeys

Caffyns

Chains

Challacombe

Cheriton farm

Church hill

Cloud farm

Combe farm

Combe Martin, church

Combe Park

Combe Park farm

Combefoot

Conscientious Objectors

Cottage Inn

Countisbury

County Gate

Cranscombe farm

Culbone

Dame school (Rockford)

Deer Park

Deercombe

Doone cottage

Doone valley

Dulverton

Dunkery Hotel

East Ilkerton farm

Exford

Exmoor Forest hotel

Farley Combe

Farley water

feather mattresses

Fellingscott farm

Ferndale school

ferrets

Floyd’s Tea Gardens

Flying circus

Folly (field name)

Fortune tellers

 

 

 

 

Gallipoli

gentlemen of the road

Gibraltar Cottages

gin trap

Glenthorne

Hallslake farm

Harvest home

hedging

Hillsford Bridge

Hoar Oak

Holiday Haunts

Holloway prison

Horner, Tea Gardens

Home Guard

horse – caravan, hanging itself, getting ready, heavy

Ilkerton ridge

Ilfracombe

Isolation hospital

Italian prisoners of war

Karswood Pig Powder

Kyber Pass

Lady Lovelace’s plantation

Larkbarrow farm

Leeford

Liptons

Llewelyn-Davis, Sylvia

Llower East Ilkerton farm

Luccombe dance

Lynch – chapel,  House

Lyncombe farm

Lyncrest

Lynmouth

Lynton

Martinhoe church

Millslade

Minehead

miniature railway

mowing machine

music hall songs

mustard plaster

myxamatosus

needlework classes

New Zealand

Oaklands

Oare

P & O

paddle steamer

Palmer’s Diaries

parlour songs

patch work quilts

peddlers

picking whorts

‘Poor poor farmer’ (song)

Porlock – church, Hill

Porlock Weir

Quarry field

Queens (hotel)

Quennell (architect)

quilts

quoits

Ranscombe farm

reading room

Red Cross

Rock close (field name)

Rockford-  pub, school, youth hostel,  ford

Rushie splat (field name)

 

 

 

Rutland Gate

Sandhurst

Scobhill gate

Scottish Shepherds

Scoresdown

sea shanties

secular songs

Selworthy church

Shepherd’s cott

Shilstone – cottage, farm

Simonsbath

singing

single furrow plough

Slade’s meadow

‘Smoke gets in your eyes’ (song)

song book

South Stock farm

Sparhanger farm

sphagnum moss

Staghunter pub

superstitious

‘Sweet Rosie O’Grady’ (song)

Swimbridge

tablecloths

Tarr steps

Taunton station

Thornworthy farm

threshing

Tippacott farm

Tiverton

Tivington

trapping

Troytes farm

Trumps, Barnstaple

tug-o-war

Twitchin farm

two headed chicken

Venniford cottages

Venniford steep

vernacular music

Victoria engine

violet rays

Wales

wash-house

washing lines

washing – basket, “blue”, collecting, dirty, ironing, line, mangle, taking in, self, starch tub

Watersmeet

Week farm

West Ilkerton farm

West Somerset Free Press

Westaway (field name)

‘When the poppies bloom again’ (song)

whist drive

wild flower competition

Williton – hospital, Institution, register office, workhouse

Wilmersham farm

Wilsham – cottage, farm

winnowing machine

Withypool

Withypool farm

wool cheque

Wootton Courtenay

workhouse

wort picking

youth hostel