“I’ve
been trying to get away from here ever since I arrived”
Nevertheless, despite a number of leisure and hobby clubs boredom
was a persistent complaint from when the first residents moved into
the first prefabs in 1940s and throughout the 1950s. It was certainly
something the local press picked up on either sympathetically or disparagingly
for years.
Under the title of ‘Hundreds Try To Quit Harold Hill’,
the Romford Times recorded the following opinions in March 1953:
‘I’ve only been here six months and I am sick to death
of Harold Hill. I’ve been trying to get away from here ever since
I came.
‘Nine out of ten people will tell you the same as I will.
This is just nothing to do here. There are no cinemas, dance halls
or pubs. That’s what I miss.
‘It’s not too bad for those with
their own transport, but when you realise that it costs 10d. to go to
Romford and back it’s
a different story altogether.’
- Constance Snell
‘You think of it – 10s. extra rent a week than they used
to pay previously, and on top of that fares to London each week. That
makes quite a hole in the working man’s pocket.’
- Cyril Lancaster
‘Believe me, that advertisement is just one of dozens that
I have displayed in an effort to get away from this place. I have
been trying to leave ever since I came here 18 months ago. My husband
wants to go back to London, too.
‘We are so lonely here. You must have fun while you are young,
mustn’t you? I want to see life again. I would far rather live
in a flat in London than in a house in Harold Hill.
‘If I want to have a day out in town it costs me a small fortune
because I cannot leave the children at home. The cost of fares is a
terrible burden on us.’
- Stella Rose
Reflecting decades later, residents commented upon the unrest that
many felt in the early years:
‘What happened was that when I visited the house, the lady next
door, Mrs Hastings, said, ‘Anybody who doesn’t take these
places doesn’t really need a place.’ I thought I better
take it because it was my third opportunity. There was a lady next
door called Mrs Ricks, and she went within six months, while Mrs Hastings
left after four years. In fact, she stayed the longest, but the rest
of them were here today, gone tomorrow.’
- Mrs Munday.
‘When they opened these estates like Harold Hill, East London
people couldn’t stomach it because it was so quiet and they came
back. And Harold Hill was the same it was like a graveyard.
'The main
attraction though was Fords. They used to work shift work, two weeks
on and two weeks off. All the men went to work and all the women stayed
at home and locked their doors because there was nothing to do’
- Danny Silver.
‘I remember getting off the removal van such as it was because
we never had any furniture, and for years and years I cried because
I wanted to go home, and when I got married I went back to Tottenham
and within five months I was back here because I hated it in London.’
- Brenda Dryer.
For some time the local shops were full of cards from hopeful tenants
seeking a swap with London tenants, and certainly there was many as
an LCC spokesman admitted in 1953:
'It's true that people are trying to leave Harold Hill. For instance,
five families left in one week alone last month.
'During the past
three months nearly 40 families have packed up and returned to
London and the Home Counties. A slow outflow is being maintained
throughout the year.'
Those leaving through official channels would have been the tip of
a much larger iceberg, with most returnees seeking do so with informal
swaps.
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