Mrs Warnes' shop and the Ship Hotel
Looking down the High Street to where the one way system is now.
Photo by Terry Walton
The Ship Hotel in the High Street seems to have an identity crisis, with the sign calling it The Buccaneer as well!
Andy Gilbert
Author
By Carol Walton/Andy GilbertPage last edited
20/07/2024
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In reply to Valerie Burton; yes Lionel Warnes had a sister, Marcia Stapley, who married Ken Tovey in 1957.
Hi Lionel
Yes I did join the army for a short time. I still visit my brother Barry in Newhaven as I now live in Lincolnshire. Still have very fond memories of the old town. Happy days..
I do remember you, Carole Wilkinson, but we boys didn’t pay much heed to girls then. Didn’t you join up? I seem to remember seeing you wearing a uniform in mother’s shop when I was 21 or so. Golden curls?
Lionel Warnes I wonder did you have a sister? Who I think might have been a bridesmaid at my mum and dad wedding Ivy & George Marchant.
Hi Carol, yes I remember you very well, our mothers were great friends for many years. They were known in our family as ‘Gert & Dais’.
I remember Mrs Warnes and her family. I lived at Riverside for a few years until we moved to St Luke’s Lane. My brother is Barry Wilkinson who still lives in Newhaven. I remember the shipyard gang. I was known as Carole Wilkinson. Does any one remember me.
I remember many happy days on Denton Island, with the gang, especially Barry Wilkinson. Also the the house opposite ours we used as target practice, with Barry’s air rifle, I believe it was his grans house.
The dog was an irish setter called Shandy, and he couldn’t be kept from water. Robinson Road was always known as ‘The Shipyard’ when I was young. Our group of boys called ourselves ‘the Shipyard gang’. It included my brother and I, Ian Shepherd, Harold Evans, Bruce Allen, Barry Wilkinson and others. We played mostly on Denton Island, especially in the empty houses, also in and on the river. Happy days. I remember the name Billy Still, but I can’t recall the face or whether he was in my class at the Boys’ School.
Further to William’s comments, where does the phrase ‘wills mothers’ come from as my mum also used it often ?
I used Warnes shop very often as a child, and later when I was a tea boy at Storehaven Engineering in Robinson Road I used to buy the choc bars, cigarettes and sweets there for the workers. Mrs Warnes always had time for a brief chat. I recall her looking through the front window at the sky over Somerhayes trees and saying “going to rain later. Its a bit dark over wills mothers” A saying she used often.
Indeed I remember you as well Lionel, good to see you posting on here.
I seem to remember them having a large curly haired dog that sometimes took a dip in the nearby river.
My mother sold groceries, milk, cigarettes and sweets. Quite a few customers were from boats, including French ferrymen who bought lots of coffee beans. The hours were very long: open at 6.30 a.m. close at 6.00 p.m. No lunch hour. Half day Wednesday and 9-12 Sunday morning. Not open Christmas day, but you could always knock at the door for those little things you had forgotten.
I went into Warnes’ shop around 1946/7 as we had heard a rumour that they had sweets there. As I walked in the shop, the owner was putting the big jar back under the counter, so I said “I’ll have a quarter pound of those please”. She did not refuse me – because I had caught her. Sweets came off ration but disappeared due to shortages. Regular customers only. Warnes was a general store, they sold sweets and tobacco.
What did they sell in Mrs Warne’s shop please?
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