For those of you who regularly read this
blog, it may have occurred to you, how did David Hall become interested in
lorries? An interest that led to Vintage Lorry Funerals being established in 2002
started when David was an infant.
David came from a humble background in County Durham,
an area dominated by Coal Mines in the 1950’s. He lived in a two bedroomed
house, commonly called a two up, two down, however the front room downstairs
was never used. It was reserved for Christmas Day, any Wedding or a funeral,
where the Deceased would lie in their coffin and the room essentially became a
Chapel of Rest. The rear ground floor room was the hub of the home with a
settee and a dinning table with the centrepiece being a coal fire, which in
addition to housing an oven, it was the only source of heat. Vegetables were
cooked in water and a kettle boiled on swing-out rings that were suspended
above the fire. The fire was also the place where David was bathed in a tin
bath that hung on the outside wall when not in use. Water from the kettle was
used to heat up cold water in the bottom of the bath. A clothes-horse draped
with towels became a modesty screen, David at the time thought that this was
the clothes-horse’s prime function!
The toilet was at the end of the yard and it
was cold and dark on a winter’s night, although a skylight sometimes let in the
moonlight. David slept head-to-toe with his baby sister and he often remembers
the ice patterns that would grow on the inside of the window during the winter.
1, Smiths Terrace, Easington Lane had no front garden and
the front door opened out onto the A182, a busy trunk road that linked Newcastle to Hartlepool.
Opposite the house there was the main manhole for the street, with a top which
didn’t fit properly and rattled every time a lorry went over it. So David’s
earliest interest with lorries occurred during the night when he was woken with
the jangling of the manhole cover. He became skilled in determining whether the
lorry was a 4 wheeled rigid, a 6 wheeled rigid or an 8 wheeled rigid, based on
their distinctive sound patterns.
Also to keep young David entertained, his Mum
used to lift him on top of the radiogram (there was no TV in the house) so that
David could wave at the Milk Tanker Driver who was collecting from a nearby
farm.
However, the main reason for David’s interest
in lorries stems from when their family van broke down on its way to Cumberland. David’s Dad
was a Clerk at the Colliery and earned just enough to feed his family, however,
there was nothing spare for luxuries, including holidays. There were no family
holidays in the 1950’s, David’s family used to visit a farm in Cumberland, as
it was known in the day, where David’s Mum had been evacuated during WWII. When
a bomb from a Heinkel He 111 hit the side of the rail bridge in South Hetton and exploded in midair, glass from windows
was shattered at a radius of 100 yards. This encouraged the owners of the Fish
& Chip shop in South Hetton to send their young child over the Pennines in
the knowledge that if the bomb hadn’t had a glancing blow on the bridge and had
hit the ground, then none of David’s Mum’s family would have survived.
So in August 1957 David’s Mum & Dad,
David and his sister Susan in her carrycot were on their way to Unthank in a
second hand Austin A40 Van. Initially the journey went well along the A690,
apart from David being car sick in Crook, however, as the van was climbing the
steep gradient towards the summit of Hartside there was a horrendous bang and
the van came to a sudden stop. David’s Dad knew that it was serious and he
obviously needed some assistance. In the 1950’s there weren’t many cars on the
road and David vividly remembers the silence with only sheep bleating in the distance.
After some time a motorbike approached and David’s Dad waved the rider down and
he gave David’s Dad a lift to the Helm Wind Café, now called the Hartside Café,
which sits on the summit, with stupendous views to the west to Lakeland and beyond.
David’s Dad used his AA Key to unlock the AA Box and phoned the Farmer with
whom they were intending to stay. The motorbike rider then took David’s Dad
back to the stricken A40 van. It now seems incredulous the some unknown
stranger should be so kind, however, in the 1950’s random acts of kindness were
common place. With not many vehicles about it was the unwritten law of the road
that you never ever passed a broken down vehicle without offering some
assistance.
It seemed a long time before the Farmer
arrived in his Morris Minor Shooting Brake with a tow rope. The Farmer towed
the A40 van to the top of Cross Fell and then let David’s Dad, on his own,
coast some 6 miles downhill to the farm in Unthank, near Gamblesby. David’s
Dad’s first concern was finding the money to pay for repairing the van and he
decided that he should go straight home and get back to work. The Farmer took
David’s Dad, David’s Mum and David’s baby Sister in her carrycot back to Easington Lane but
there was no room in the car for David.
So in August 1957, David aged 4 years and 4
months was left with the Farmer’s Daughter-in-Law, Alice Threlkeld. It was a
strange situation for David because he had never been away from home before and
he had never slept on his own before. It was also strange situation for Alice
Threlkeld who was a young Farmer’s Wife who at the time had no children of her
own. However, she was experienced with young children being a Sunday School
Teacher at Gamblesby
Methodist Church.
Alice need not
have been worried about looking after David because she had an ace card up her
sleeve, her Dad was Albert Kelso who owned Fellside Transport and operated nine
lorries mainly on livestock movements.
Albert and his wife, who everyone called Ma,
visited Alice
on the Sunday and there was an immediate chemistry established between David
and Albert who christened him ‘Mr. Crockett’, after the western character Davy
Crockett. Albert and Ma took David back to Lazonby in their Standard Vanguard
and he spent the next two weeks there whilst the Crankshaft of the A40 van was
replaced. The Austin
van was repaired by Lace Brothers Garage in Lazonby who were great friends with
Albert Kelso and it is understood that Albert encouraged Howard Lace to give
the A40 priority and also to sharpen his pencil when it came to their costings.
Ma Kelso always called David M’Lad and held
his hand as they went up the stone staircase of Croft House, leading David to
an enormous bedroom. That night David slept right through with no lorries going
over manhole covers to keep him awake, only the sound of sheep bleating in the
fields.
David spent the next two weeks in the cabs of
livestock collection lorries taking sheep, cattle and pigs from farms into the
Auction Mart at Penrith, which was then in the middle of the town but now is a
Morrisons Supermarket. David was normally a bad traveller on car journeys,
however, he never felt sick in a lorry which was much higher and he could see
animals in the fields over the top of hedgerows.
Albert
Kelso had built up a very successful business buying second hand Leyland Beaver
chassis from BP and other oil companies who had discarded their vehicles after
5 years, in line with their large company depreciation policies. These chassis
cabs were painted grey with red mudguards, and a wooden deck, with a lift-off
livestock container which was created by the team at Fellside Transport.
Albert was a great admirer of Leyland Beavers
as the vehicle was robustly built, a 120 b.h.p. engine that would go up Shap
Fell on the A6 in top gear and had an amazing lock which meant that a Leyland
Beaver could get into a tight farmyard entrance that other lorries couldn’t
access.
In 1957 Albert gave David a Leyland Cap Badge
which David still uses today on his Beret as he drives his Leyland Beaver in
funerals. John Kelso took over the business when Albert passed away in 1971 and
in 2004 David received a package in the post from John and Ma Kelso. It was an
AA Badge that had been on one of the lorries. The picture below shows David in
Cwmbran with his Drivers Qualification Card, which all Lorry Drivers must now
possess.
In 2018 sadly only Alice Threlkeld and Alan
Kelso, Albert’s Grandson are still around. David regularly writes to Alice updating her of
developments and he often recalls that during the 1950’s she was the only
person in Unthank who had a telephone, everyone else gave the number of the
call box in the centre of the village as their ‘personal’ phone number. When
the phone rang any passerby would answer it, ask who was speaking and who they
wanted to contact, before running to tell Eric Mason that a relation was on the
phone. The ladies of the village used to take turns in cleaning the Telephone
Call Box.
Alan Kelso is probably the youngest person to
obtain a Driving Licence, passing his test at 0930 hours on his 17th
Birthday driving a 3 Ton Commer Lorry from Fellside Transport. He is still
involved in livestock movements, managing this part of the Armstrong of Longton
business. He works exceptionally long hours, however, he is always available to
discuss any points David needs advice on regarding the 1950 Leyland
Beaver.