In the picture above, Bill Andrews is third from the right in the back
row. He was known to us all as 'Skip', short for 'Skipper'.
Siting in the centre from left to right is the
Rev Kemmish, the Minister of the Baptist Church. Next to him is
Lieutenant Payne-Galway, supporting the village activities by his
honoured presence, but little else, in the way this type of person
deemed to be their natural duty back in those days. And next to him are
Mr and Mrs Webb, troop benefactors (see below).
Most village boys were members of the scouts or
cubs, according to their age. I believe the uniform had much to do with
it. We were so excited as the various items - shirt, shoulder flashes,
scarves and woggles - individually became available, presumably as the
funds allowed them to be purchased.
I was originally a wolf cub where I proudly rose
to the rank of senior sixer. As a cub, I remember taking part in an
Armistice Sunday church parade. Leading the parade was the Crewkerne
Grammar School Air Training Corps bugle band. Behind them, led by their
white-gloved standard bearers, were the ranks of the members of the
Merriott branch of the British Legion, medals proudly on display. Then
came the scouts, followed by the cubs. Finally, came two or three
special constables keeping us in check. We marched from Knapp, via Lower
Street, to All Saint's Church. Then, after the service, we marched back
down to Knapp via Broadway. (For the record, I do not recall an
Armistice parade that included the local Home Guard, Air Raid Protection
Wardens (ARP), or the members of the Red Cross. I know these
organisations existed in the village during the war years but perhaps
they had been disbanded by the time I was a wolf cub.)
At the age of eleven, I transferred from the cubs
to the scouts and it is the scouting activities that I can best
remember.
We met once a week, the venue being a wartime
Nissan hut in the orchard next to the tithe barn, opposite the church.
This hut had originally been a cookhouse for the American soldiers who
were stationed in the village prior to D-Day. Part of this structure
remained standing until 1999.
We partook in all the usual scouting activities
such as first aid and tying knots. On summer evenings we went tracking
across the fields, or learnt to cook flower-and-water twists, on sticks,
over campfires. We later ate these twists, washed down with smoky cocoa
poured form sooty billycans into enamel mugs. All this was supposedly in
training for our big objective, to 'go away' camping.
Initially we were somewhat limited with regard to
camping as the only tent available was a WWI ex-army bell tent that some
village worthy had donated for our use, but it did provide the nucleus
for our first major camping expedition. This was at the foot of Castle
Hill, a prominent landmark some two miles from the village. The bell
tent, a couple of very small ridge tents, and a miscellany of other
gear, including food and our blankets, were excitedly transported to the
site on a very ancient, overloaded vicarage handcart. (It fell to pieces
on the return journey a few days later.)
Skip slept in one of the small ridge tents; the
other was used as a food store. The rest of us slept in a circle,
shoulder to shoulder, feet to the central tent pole of the bell tent.
There was great excitement; most of us had never slept away from home
before.
We were told to bring just two blankets each. A
friend of mine from a very poor family had only one, and even that was
rather thin. We pooled our resources and made a double bed from our
three blankets. In terms of being warm in the middle of the night, this
was very much at my expense.
With the exception of a bulk purchase of loaves
from the village bakery, we all brought food from home, including fresh
vegetables from our gardens - practically every household grew their own
vegetables in those days – and various tinned stuff. A typical hot
meal would consist of boiled potatoes plus a mixture of the contents of
many tins - various soups, beans, processed peas, stewed steak and
goodness knows what else - all poured into a large billycan and heated
over the camp fire. It tasted wonderful. There was never enough.
The occasion the photograph above records is the
official handing over to the troop of four large ridge tents. These had
been purchased by money donated by the shipmates of Mr and Mrs Webb's
only son, Harry Trevor Webb. He was a leading airman in the Fleet Air
Arm and was killed at sea in I944 when he was just 2I years of age. His
name is included on the village war memorial in All Saint’s
churchyard.
Apparently Trevor, as he was known, had been a
scout in his earlier years. On the red pole of each tent there was a
brass plaque inscribed: To The Memory Of Scout Trevor Webb' followed by
the years in which he was born and later died in the service of his
country.
These four tents and a miscellany of other
equipment purchased with the donated money meant our camping activities
were greatly enhanced. For instance, one cold and wet Easter weekend we
took part in a district competition camp on the Windwhistle estate, near
Chard. We didn't win, but we had a wonderful time competing.
The following summer we went of to camp at Uphill,
near Weston-Super-Mare. This was a highly successful week, with glorious
weather. But our big adventure came the following year when we camped in
South Wales, near Maesteg, Bill Andrew's home town. We camped on a hilly
site with a rushing stream in the valley below and with mountains,
something we had never seen before, as a backdrop. It was a wonderful
experience. We travelled there by train. l remember we caught the train
at Yeovil Pen Mill station having been transported there by a bus hired
from Joe Wintle from Martock. But l remember nothing else of the journey
to Wales, or the return journey. It is only as an adult that l realise
what a major undertaking it must have been for Bill Andrews getting us
there and back. Regrettably, l think we children took it all for
granted. l just hope our parents didn't.
The second man to whom a good number of village
lads had reason to be thankful was another outsider, Mr Manning. He was
for a time the secretary of the local football club but in particular he
organised a youth team in which l played. We played in the Perry Street
and District Youth league and were quite successful. We were runners up
in the league in the 1950/5I season and went on to win the league in
195I/52.
Football was essentially a winter game in those
days, the season being much shorter than it is now. Thus in the summer
there was very little sporting activity in the village - no cricket, no
tennis, no swimming. But there was bowls.