Herald - Issue 403

11th March 2021 • The HERALD • Page 13 v SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL BUSINESSES v Chiropractic Sports Massage/Therapy Podiatry Acupuncture Shockwave Nutrition Functional Fitness Classes PODIATRY Nail Cutting Service Corn & Callus Removal Verrucae Treatment Cracked Heel Ingrown Toe Nails Fungal Toe Nail Diabetic Foot Care Plantar Heel Pain Biomechanical Assessment Musculoskeletal Injuries Sports Injuries Nail Surgery Nail Reconstruction Offered by HCPC registred Podiatrist Rosie Reid MChs £5 OFF 1ST VISIT on presentation of this advertisement Medino House, Rushington Business Park, Totton, Southampton SO40 9LU 023 8001 9099 www.bodyworxhealth.co.uk Eastleigh & Chanders Ford, Southampton, New Forest Area Tel: 023 8019 3007 • Mobile: 07710 464093 Email: mark@markparsonsdecorating.co.uk Web: www.markparsonsdecorating.co.uk All aspects of Domestic and Commercial Painting & Decorating Services MOBILE CARPET SHOP THAT COMES TO YOU SUPPLY & FITTING of Carpet, Vinyl or FIT ONLY of your flooring ANY LIKE FOR LIKE QUOTATION • Furniture moved and rubbish removed on request • Doors eased • Re-adaptions, re-stretches, repairs Free Estimates • OAP Discount Available • CRB Checked We are Still Working in a COVID-Safe way for ALL your Flooring Needs Tel: 07771 521243 BUNGALOW IN DEVON EXCHANGE WANTED A lovely 1 bedroom bungalow located on the outskirts of Barnstaple in Devon. Easy and close by access to - beaches, shops, doctors, dentist, hospital, bus stops, hotels and road network. The bungalow is let from a housing association with age 55+ restriction. WANTED - Any housing association bungalow considered within “The Herald” circulation areas. Genuine reason for exchange. Please phone 07555 056236 for further details A Blast from the Past – The History of Fawley Cottage and Orchard Close by Robin Somes, Fawley & Blackfield Memories Group e 1838 Fawley tithe map shows that Fawley Cottage was owned by omas de Grey (1788– 1839), the 4th Baron Walsingham, who was Rector of Fawley. On Walsingham’s death, it was occupied by his successor, the Rev. William Gibson, though still owned by the Walsingham family. In 1903 it was inhabited by A.C. Cossor, who lived in Fawley almost 20 years, serving as Parish Council chairman from 1911 until his death in 1922. e house was then bought from the Walsingham family in 1925; a er being run as a boarding house by a Mrs Radcli e, a generously-built lady with a racy reputation, it stood empty for several years. My grandparents, Jo, and Evie Somes, bought it in 1938 for £1,450, including 2½ acres of land. e property originally had a beautifully laid- out walled garden and orchard – which can be seen in the accompanying photo from 1913. e front garden held a monkey puzzle tree, which many locals will remember, and a Pond cypress, Latin name Taxodium ascendens , native to North America. e latter was so rare in Britain that a coach party of tree enthusiasts took a day trip from the West Country to view it. During the war, the family provided food, entertainment and accommodation for servicemen stationed in the area, and had an active role in village life. In the 1960’s, the surrounding land was sold to local builders Hutchings and Matthews, and now forms Orchard Close. Around the same time, parts of the house were divided into ats and rented out, while the rest stayed unimproved. My memories of it include a windowless, almost pitch-black scullery, bare flagstone floor, a rudimentary Geysir water heater, strong smell of mould, and a selection of decaying outbuildings. Finally, after my grandparents’ deaths, Fawley Cottage was sold o in 1984, and redeveloped as Hamlet Court. However, a surprising number of people still recall living there, and the family who owned it. For more local stories of times gone by follow: www. f acebook . com/ groups /14841079684 92221 Fawley Cottage Walled Garden in 1913 Most people who live around Fawley will know Orchard Close, off Church Lane, a small close of houses built in the 1960’s, but fewer will know its origin, or the history of Hamlet Court, the large property at the entrance. The latter was originally a large house, named Fawley Cottage.

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTIyNzI=