Bryerswood, 3 Stourwood Road.
I’m going to have to rebuild
this home, chronologically. My first
impression was doors, lots of them. You
went in through the front door, down a short corridor into the hall, and there
were these doors all around you. How
many, and where they led, was an exciting prospect, but it was the doors
themselves that captivated me. The only
doors I’d ever seen before were the usual three-up-three-down panelled sort,
painted white. They were just things to
be opened and closed. But the Bryerswood
doors were flush flat polished dark wood.
There were more doors than I’d ever seen on one floor.
Then we went up the open stairs,
with their half-landing that was big enough for a substantial cupboard, and yet
more gorgeous doors. That was enough for
me. I fell in love with this house’s
doors.
Of course, that was only the beginning. Apart from the living rooms and bedrooms, there were several toilets (though only one bathroom), an area behind the kitchen containing a walk-in larder (which had a section with a fine-gauze screen to keep flies out, so you could keep meat in there: never used for that purpose, we had a fridge by then) and a passage that led to another small room, previously the maid’s quarters, which immediately became The Den. We’d been avid followers of Life With The Lyons, but this Den immediately became a kids-only province. Grandpa’s old radiogram was installed in there, along with his huge record collection (78s of course), and we worked our way assiduously through them.
As I’ve suggested, my father
loved projects, and once they’d been completed he lost interest. So the dismantling of the model railway, once
I’d grown out of it, was fine by him. I
don’t think there was any resentment.
Though come to think of it, my brother might have inherited it for a few
years – he’d have been about six when it was constructed. If that’s so, I’d
have moved on far enough not to notice any emotions of any sort in my father,
because I was starting to move on into adolescence, with all that carries.