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1960s
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blackdog
November 21, 2010, 3:03pm Report to Moderator

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Not a lot of activity on the memories board recently - so I thought I would share NWN's review of the 1960s, as printed in January 1970.

1960

Railway enthusiasts came from long distances for a sentimental journey on the last passenger train on the Lambourn Valley branch line. The date was January 2 and so many wanted to make the trip that the passenger train was the longest seen on the line for many years. Six carriages were booked up and for good measure a horse box was added, carrying a horse from Ireland to Lambourn.
[FGW take note - more passengers, add more carriages]
On March 5 the lights went out on the Newbury-Winchester line when a five-coach train drawn by a 19th century locomotive puffed out of Newbury Station.
Mr Edward Terrell, QC, Newbury's Recorder, looked back over 25 years when a dinner was given at the Chequers to mark his silver jubilee as Recorder. Among those present were Lord Carnarvon, the High Steward, the Mayor and Mayoress (Coun and Mrs J M Freeman), members of the legal profession and local magistrates.
[Newbury had Quarter Sessions in those days, as well as two magistrates courts]
Damage estimated at £200,000 was caused by a fire at James and Co (Hungerford) Ltd's Great Western Mill in Church Street. The mill was burnt out, together with machinery and the stock inside.
Almost an inch of rain fell in 25 minutes when Newbury was hit by a thunderstorm in September, Park Way and Kimber's Corner were flooded several inches.
[Flooding due to global warming?]
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blackdog
November 22, 2010, 6:21pm Report to Moderator

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1961
A former St Bartholomew's Grammar School boy, Supt E R Clarke, who was born at Inglewood, Kintbury, was appointed Newbury's police chief. He joined the Berkshire Constabulary as a civilian clerk in 1933 and became a constable at Reading in 1934. He reached the rank of Superintendent in 1958.
[Do we still merit a Superintendent these days?]
Sir David Eccles, Minister of Education, opened Downs Secondary School, Compton. The school which cost £118,000 was the seventh of nine to be built in Berkshire.
A big fire gutted The House of Toomer's main shop and basement and burnt out the offices on the first floor. Damage was assessed at £40,000 in stock alone.
Thursday, June 22, was a red letter day in the history of the Newbury Weekly News. A new £10,000 printing press was switched on by the Mayor (Coun H K Potter) and for the first time the paper carried news on the front page.
Racehourse owner and breeder, Mrs Vera Lilley, of Woolton House, Woolton Hill, won the St Ledger with Aurelious, ridden by Lambourn jockey Lester Piggott.
Thirty-six members of the local branch of the National Association of Schoolmasters held a one-day protest strike in support of the association's demand for an independent inquiry into teachers' salaries and conditions of work. The strike meant a day's holiday for 1,200 children.
[36 teachers strike, 1,200 kids off school. The pupil/teacher ration must have been massively higher then]
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blackdog
November 24, 2010, 11:18am Report to Moderator

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1962
Prince Charles made the headlines throughout the world in February when he was rushed by ambulance from Cheam School at Headley to London with appendicitis. The 13-year-old Prince was accompanied on Newbury ambulance's 60 mile dash to the operating table by Mr John Joyce, Newbury Hospital surgeon, and Dr Basil Phillips, of Bishop's Green, the school doctor. He returned to school in March but three weeks later came the end of term and Prince Charles' last day of his five years at the school.
On Good Friday came one of the Aldermaston marches in which 20 local supporters joined the 14,000 who filed out of a field near the AWRE on the first leg of a 50-mile nuclear weapon protest trek to London.
Also in April Newbury Town football club played their last match in the Metropolitan League before joining the Hellenic League. About the same time the Town started building their new headquarters near the present relief road.
On September 8 and 8.07 pm the last passenger train on the Newbury-Didcot line pulled out of Newbury station. People in the wayside cottages waved Union Jack flags as the train passed. The guard draped his cap with a black shawl and carried a small 'coffin' labelled ' Didcot-Newbury line, died September 8 1962, from an overdose of Beeching pills'.
Police made 342 arrests during a weekend demonstration outside the USAAF air base at Greenham in June. The 'ban-the-bomb' protest, organised by the Oxford Committee of 100, cost the demonstrators over £2,000 in fines.
Boys from the Archaeological Society at St Bartholomew's Grammar School spent many hours of their summer holidays excavating the Roman Villa uncovered by a gravel digger at Hamstead Marshall.
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dodgy
November 24, 2010, 10:49pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from blackdog
1962
Prince Charles made the headlines throughout the world in February when he was rushed by ambulance from Cheam School at Headley to London with appendicitis. The 13-year-old Prince was accompanied on Newbury ambulance's 60 mile dash to the operating table by Mr John Joyce, Newbury Hospital surgeon, and Dr Basil Phillips, of Bishop's Green, the school doctor. He returned to school in March but three weeks later came the end of term and Prince Charles' last day of his five years at the school.
On Good Friday came one of the Aldermaston marches in which 20 local supporters joined the 14,000 who filed out of a field near the AWRE on the first leg of a 50-mile nuclear weapon protest trek to London.
Also in April Newbury Town football club played their last match in the Metropolitan League before joining the Hellenic League. About the same time the Town started building their new headquarters near the present relief road.
.


Remember it well..I actually played against Prince Charles at rugby for St Barts around that time
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Brewmaster
November 25, 2010, 9:57am Report to Moderator

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Quoted from dodgy


Remember it well..I actually played against Prince Charles at rugby for St Barts around that time

And John Joyce also removed my appendix. Does this qualify me for a seat at the forthcoming Royal wedding?

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blackdog
November 25, 2010, 5:29pm Report to Moderator

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1963
Onw of the heaviest snowfalls for many years disrupted traffic for a week. A party of 22 Great Bedwyn people, including five children, spent a night in a coach marooned in a snowdrift of the Wantage to Shefford road. Snow clearance in Newbury cost between £250 and £300 a day. Hundreds of men were thrown out of work.
[And we moan about a lack of gritting]
Four Newbury councillors together with four from Andover were joined by 130 Newburians and 80 Andover folk on a walk from Newbury to Andover. The walk staqrted as a challenge between the councils and when the next year over 700 walkers took part.
Newbury British Legion's new £6,000 headwuarters in Pelican Lane was opened by the Mayor (Coun RWG French).
The Regal Cinema in Bartholomew Street closed down. After over 50 years as the cinema's chief projectionist, Mr Leonard Taylor, retired. Last film shown at the cinema was Peter Seller's comedy 'The Wrong Arm of the Law'.
Damage running into thousands of pounds resulted from a big fire at Inkpen saw mills.
Berkshire County Council voted against flouridation of water in the county.
In June, John o'Gaunt Secondary School costing nearly £215,000 was officially opened.
The reconstructed swimming pool at Newbury's Northcroft was opened.
Work started on a £60,000 scheme to cut across land and iron out the road danger on the Bath Road neay Kintbury crossroads.
Wash Common was made a parish.
Farmers worked desperately to save rotting crops in the fields.
A low-loader blocked Northbrook Street for three hours when it grounded on the water bridge.
Work started on the north-south relief road in September. The same month Newbury Town football club's new pavilion was opened.
Newbury and Braunfels were officially linked at a special signing ceremony by the two Mayors.
The last Elcot agricultural show was held with a record £22,000 crowd.
There was a £6,000 fire at Enborne Gate Farm.
The Queen gave a Bible to Headley Church, where Prince Charles worshipped while at Cheam School.
Newbury's new £40,000 slaughterhouse opened.
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26
November 25, 2010, 5:52pm Report to Moderator
Guest User
Quoted from blackdog
1963


A damn fine year.
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BrianB
November 25, 2010, 7:19pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from blackdog
1963
One of the heaviest snowfalls for many years disrupted traffic for a week. A party of 22 Great Bedwyn people, including five children, spent a night in a coach marooned in a snowdrift of the Wantage to Shefford road.


One of the lasting memories of my younger days. I was 13 at the time and we had been to the New Theatre at Oxford for the pantomime. We spent a very cold night in that coach until the following morning when we were rescued by a local farmer.



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dodgy
November 25, 2010, 10:08pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from Brewmaster

And John Joyce also removed my appendix. Does this qualify me for a seat at the forthcoming Royal wedding?



Standing room only tw--!
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blackdog
November 25, 2010, 11:01pm Report to Moderator

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1964
This year heard the first whisper in March of the Ravenseft property deal to change completely the face of the Cheap Street-Market Street-Bartholomew Street triangle.
Close on the heels of this news came the controversial plans for expanding Newbury into a city with an eventual population of 250,000.
Three key shops in the Bartholomew Street shopping centre of the future fetched £150,000 at a London auction.
Airmen from the Greenham Common USAF base packed their bags and flew home half-way through the year, following a farewell parade through Newbury.
In the General Election Mr John Astor (Conservative) won but with a majority reduced from 9,916 in 1959 to 5,993.
A frustrating year for traders with repeated delays in the building of the Cheap Street railway bridge.
In January Newbury's Old People's Welfare Committee explored the possibilty of raising £30,000 for the building of Fair Close.
A four-year-old Tadley boy who found golden guineas worth £75 in a rusty tin had them returned to him by the Basingstoke Coroner, who ruled they were not treasure trove.
Team Spirit, trained by Mr Fulke Walwyn at Lambourn, won the Grand National and returned to a hero's welcome.
A record crowd saw the Newbury Agricultural Show off to a good start at its new Henwick ground.
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brian
November 26, 2010, 8:41pm Report to Moderator

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1962-1963

The Turnpike Estate was being built in these years. A major build for Newbury Council in an attempt to reduce the housing waiting list.
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blackdog
November 27, 2010, 1:23am Report to Moderator

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1965
A year of uncertainty and rumour. Newbury's future hung in the balance pending a Government decision on whether the town should remain a market centre or grow into a 250,000 city.
Rumours that the United States Air Force might return to Greenham were denied by the Ministry of Defence in June.
The north-south relief road through Newbury was opened in September, but immediately created traffic problems in other parts of the town.
A working party was appointed by Newbury Divisional Executive in September to consider the reorganisation of secondary education along comprehensive lines.
Combe gibbet was sawn down in March.
Lord Hurd was appointed an Honorary Freeman of the Borough.
In April Jay Trump became the third Lambourn hourse to win the Grand National in successive years.
A plan by egg millionaire Jack Eastwood to turn the 2,046 acre Linkenholt Esatate into a huge egg battery farm was turned down.
Work started on East Ilsley by-pass.
Six hundred walkers too part in the Newbury-Andover walk.
The Royal Agricultural Show was held at Kingsclere.
Windsor & Neate's furniture store was burnt down. Arson was suspected.
Work started on a new grandstand at Newbury Racecourse.
The new St George's Church at Wash Common was consecrated by the Bishop of Oxford.
Jewellry and furs worth £2,000 were stolen from the Speen home of jockey Joe Mercer in December.
Combe Manor Estate was sold for £35,000.
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Brewmaster
November 27, 2010, 12:04pm Report to Moderator

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This is great stuff, gents. Keep it going!
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blackdog
November 27, 2010, 1:25pm Report to Moderator

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1966
Swindon got the vote over Newbury as being the better place to develop the 250,000 population city.
[Phew!]
The big storm over comprehensive education in Newbury broke with the divisional executive's plans which were published in February. In June the controversy reached a climax when a bitter public meeting broke up in disorder.
Baron Hurd of Newbury, MP for the division for 19 years, died on holiday in Antigua.
Mrs Elizabeth Ganf became the first married woman to be elected Mayor of Newbury.
Two racehorses valued at £10,000 died in a Lambourn racing stable fire.
Anglo, trained by Fred Winter at Lambourn, completed a remarkable four-year Grand National winning run for the village.
Peace and quiet returned to the accident-scarred village of East Ilsley in May with the opening of the by-pass.
The Andover Walk drew a record entry - and the biggest rumpus when the first man home, an Andover walker, was disqualified for running.
Extensions to Shaw House School, costing £170,000, were opened in July.
St Bartholomew's Grammar School celebrated its quincentenary.
Hungerford's 'grand old man', Mr Edward Payne, died aged 87.
In October drastice railway service cuts at Newbury came into force.
Ravenseft Properties Ltd assured the town council that they intended to develop the Cheap Street - Market Place - Bartholomew Street triangle.
A Brightwalton farmer, Mr John Stephens, concussed in a road accident, was missing for 20 hours.
There was a £10,000 jewellry haul in October at the Bagnor home of Mr and Mrs Billy Wallace.
Oddest story of the year was a 'goose march' by a gaggle of geese across the Berkshrie Downs.
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blackdog
November 27, 2010, 11:44pm Report to Moderator

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1967
September saw the first Newbury Festival since the 1953 Coronation.
The retirement was announced of Mrs France Belk, who produced nearly 30 pantomimes in Newbury.
Flying saucers were seen in both May and September. Mortimer engineer Mr John Searl claimed he launched the May one, and apprentices at Farnborough left the September one in a Welford field as part of a hoax right across the south of England.
Americans returned to Greenham air base in January - for limited operations of storage emphasised the USAF.
The Newbury Weekly News celebrated in February with a 32-page supplement.
It was decided to close Newbury cattle market in two years.
There was a severe fire at Eddington saw mills and in another blaze, tons of hay, worth £1,200 were destroyed in a barn at Chaddleworth.
Thatcham residents agitating for a predestrian crossing on the A4 held up race traffic with a two-mile trek through the village.
The first people moved into Thatcham's Waring Close for old folk.
Newbury Town Council announced plans for a new town hall when Ravenseft released details of their development plans in April.
Foinavon, a 100-1 outsider, won the Grand National and glory for its Compton trainer John Kempton.
Berkshire combined with four other police areas to from the Thames Valley Constabulary.
Two men pleaded guilty at Newbury to bugging the telephone of a Cold Ash man in what the prosecution called 'industrial espionage'.
Publicans complained of a 50 per cent drop in trade with the new breathalyser law in October.
In two raids on consecutive weekends at Littlecote House armour and other antiques worth £12,000 were stolen.
The Queen Mother officially opened Fair Close old folks' day centre.
Farmers took strict precautions after the outbreak of foot and mouth disease.
Four RAF personnel were killed when a helicopter crashed at Brightwalton.
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blackdog
November 30, 2010, 11:40am Report to Moderator

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1968
'A year of decisions' summed up 1968. In February the Borough Surveyor, Mr John Knowles, announced a new town road plan. This was followed by much controversy, but the revised plan was overwhelmingly approved in November.
Hopes were high that a start would be made on the Ravenseft scheme, but it was announced that revised plans had put the start off until the Autumn of 1969.
A cut of 20 beds at Newbury District Hospital was announced, but a decision was deferred following local opposition.
Arguments brewed over the plan of the local Education Executive to have sixth for work dealy with at St Barthlomew's Grammar School under the new comprehensive policy programme. The matter was handed over the the Secretary of State for final decision.
The A4 between Calcot and Froxfield claimed 30 lives during the year, and in one black patch in November nine people were killed in six different accidents. Questions were asked in the House of Commons as part of a demand for a better road.
Mrs Doris Page, the Newbury polio victim, was awarded the MBE in the New Year's Honours list.
A mock battle in Newbury centre at Easter was staged by anti-Vietnam war demonstrators.
Two forged £5 notes were handed in at Thatcham.
Enborne Church realised that a silver goblet that had sat in the church for 300 years was worth £2,000.
Foundations of the new telephone exchange were laid in May.
The Bear Hotel at Hungerford was bought for £23,000.
Commuter travel was disrupted by a nation-wide work-to-rule.
Kingsclere Vicar's wife, Mrs Jean Shurlock, saved two village children from drowning in the Thames during a Sunday School outing.
Camp Close tenants pressed the Town Council to bring forward the date for carrying out improvements from 1970.
John Hodges and Alison Potter of Newbury arrived back safely from a visit to trouble-torn Czechoslovakia.
September will long be remembered for the floods, when over 2in of rain fell in 48 hours and a thunderbolt fell a few feet from spectators at Newbury Racecourse.
Donnington Castle Caravans pulled off a £1 million export order.
Four hundred workers at the Command Ordnance Depot at Thatcham were told they would lose their jobs.
Plenty's of Newbury merged with SPP.
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blackdog
December 1, 2010, 9:29am Report to Moderator

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1969
The year started with Panda police cars being introduced.
Coun Jimmy Crowe announced a plan for a 200-seat theater at West Mills.
A row over dangers to children in Kiln Road, Shaw, started with dark January mornings.
The Government told Newbury Town Council that Camp Close must stay.
Hopes that the Kennet and Avon Canal could be opened up between Newbury and Reading were held up by work on the M4.
Six Pakistanis in one car were killed in the worst ever A4 crash.
Rumours were rife that London's third airport might be planted at Greenham.
Chilton Electrics were taken over in a £1/2 million deal.
Antiques worth £20,000 were lost when fire swept throught the home of author Osbert Wyndham Hewett at Lambourn in April.
Concern was growing among Newbury town councillors that there was still no start on the Ravenseft scheme.
A big row started with the publication of the Maud Report on local government reform.
A Lambourn church flagon fetched £15,000 at Christie's.
A big open-air pop festival was held at Northcroft in July.
At the end of July came the 'scoop' of the year when NWN released details of a secret plan to expand Newbury and the surrounding district by about 18,000 in the next 10 years.
Mr Edward Short, Secretary of State for Education, announced plans for reorganisation of education in the Newbury area along comprehensive lines.
A village plan to preserve Kintbury was published.
It was announced that a £2 million 328-house estate would be built near Newbury racecourse early in 1970.
Mr and Mrs Albert Childs, both over 80, were given a reprieve after being told they would have to move out of their Inkpen cottage.
September saw the re-enaction of the First Battle of Newbury, a popular pageant at Newbury Agricultural Show, and Newbury's best-ever carnival.
Police looked for a fire-raiser after three buildings in Bartholomew Street, Newbury, were burnt out.
The town was told it would lose its quarter sessions.
Combe gibbet was cut down again.
A NWN survey revealed that Newbury shops were flouting the law over the sale of fireworks.
Many schools were affected by teachers' strikes.
The Rector of Newbury retired in November after 15 years in the town.


One photograph on the page - the Queen Mother unveiling a plaque as she opened Fair Close day centre in 1967.  The plaque that was stolen earlier this year.
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LocalRes
February 4, 2011, 11:10am Report to Moderator

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Ah, 1969, I remember it well.
My father owned a limousine car hire business in London for a while, and used to transport around some worldwide celebrities.
One of his clients was Sheikh Khalid, the ruler of Sharjah. Dr. Sheikh Khalid bin Mohammed Al Qasimi was ruler of the Emirate of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates from 1965 to 1972. He was installed by British Forces after the removal of the previous ruler Sheikh Saqr bin Sultan who was his cousin and brother-in-law. He was a participant of the first union talks of the United Arab Emirates Federation. In 1972, Khalid bin Mohammed Al Qasimi was assassinated by the previous ruler in a bloody palace coup.

Anyway, Sheikh Khalid came to our house in Newbury on the weekend of the re-enactment of the Battle of Newbury (21st September 1969), and attended the re-enactment, with his minders and security staff. They had to arrange a roped off area, with special seating arrangements, and there were armed guards with him. We went to the enactment in limousines from our house, and were treated like royalty - well he was! I found it very embarrassing at the time.
I had no car, as I had recently written off a 6 week old Triumph Vitesse, so was at my parents home at the time, and was therefore in the middle of this, and travelled to the event with the Sheikh himself.
A while afterwards he presented all the family with gifts. I remember my father had an Akai reel to reel tape deck (expensive in those days), my mother had a gold watch with changable cases, and I had a mint stamp collection and album of all the stamps produced in Sharjah, including some which were imbossed on gold foil. I still have them to this day.
My only regret - I did not get Sheikh Khalid to sign the album.

I also remember the fire in Bartholomew Street 31st September 1969). It damaged the Bricklayers, now the Purple Lounge, and spread right through to Cheap Street, damaging the launderette and a vacated tobacconists, which was opposite the post office. Luckily many of the cottages inbetween had been vacated in readiness for the Kennet Centre development, which had not yet started. Appliances from six stations attended, and two firemen were injured.
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Uncle
March 25, 2011, 11:48pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from dodgy


Remember it well..I actually played against Prince Charles at rugby for St Barts around that time



I was on the pitch,too,that night, in the under 13s battle St Barts v. Cheam!

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dodgy
March 26, 2011, 10:57am Report to Moderator

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Quoted from Uncle



I was on the pitch,too,that night, in the under 13s battle St Barts v. Cheam!



We must be related!
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Mick Sinden
May 27, 2011, 6:58am Report to Moderator

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1969 a good year Reggae nights down the football club on Fridays. Saturdayswas roller disco in the Corn Exchange I dont know what year that finished.Saturday afternoons there was the Waterside Youth Club and the Tea Bar.Saturday nights you had the choice see bands like Mud ,Soul Reason or a disco down the Waterside.See bands like Jimmy Hendrix ,Geno Washington,Simon Dupree And The Big Sound (kites),The crazy World Of Arthur Brown (fire) or even Leapy Lee (little arrows)down at the plaza with George Shears on the door.or the ultimate night club in Newbury Burnetts up the Oxford road dancing to motown ,northern soul and reggae played by Dave Woodley the resident D.J. Sundays were a bit quieter with the cinema in the afternoon and Burnetts again sunday night. There were lots of charescters about in those days Sandy the tramp lovely old boy used to earn his keep clearing glasses in the Castle or any work he could find.Don Day the photographer for the Newbury Weekly,The Verger from St Nicks Church always selling something I bought my first scooter from him a Zundap Bella I think I paid £2 for it I wonder what its worth today
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