Until the late 1950's there were six shops in Pirton, five of which were
within a stone's throw of the village pond. Imagine the junction where Cromwell
Way now leads off from the High Street - no Cromwell Way, just a track between
the gardens of the houses on either corner; both gardens later to lose some land
when Cromwell Way and Bunyan Close were built. The rough track between these two
corner houses led to a gate and beyond the gate were the meadows belonging to
Fred Weeden of Cromwell Cottage.
On the other corner stood the ironmongers and multi-purpose shop belonging to
Ted Titmuss. This is now the home of Val Guess and Roger Blackburn, no. 73 High
Street. Imagine it as Ted's ironmongers - in other words take away the present
front porch and side extension, but add to it most of the pair of houses just in
Cromwell Way (Nos. 69 & 71 High Street). Until the mid 1920's it had been
one of the many village pubs, 'The Blacksmith's Arms' run by Frank (Baccy)
Titmuss. The name of the pub almost certainly grew from the blacksmiths just a
few yards further along High Street (next to Harold Massam's house). This had
been a pub since around 1830, run by the Odell and Chamberlain families. The pub
sold a number of items including cigarettes (presumably accounting for the owner’s
nickname of 'Baccy' Titmuss) and when the premises passed to Frank's son, Ted
Titmuss, Ted decided to convert it into a shop, mainly ironmongery.
Here the ironmongers-cum-general-store remained from 1927 until Ruth Titmuss
finally sold it in 1964. It finally closed down a couple of years later. For
forty years Ted and his wife Ruth served the village. There can hardly be a
villager who lived in Pirton at that time who does not still have something from
the Hardware Stores. Irene Burton from Danefield still has a grater that she and
Roy bought when they first set up home in the village just after the war. For
Ted sold almost everything that you can associate with an 'old-fashioned'
hardware shop. And his catch phrase was : 'If I haven't got what you want today,
I'll have it for you tomorrow'.
With the shop door opening onto High Street (same place as present inner door
to no. 73) one entered into an array of domestic, work and do-it-yourself items.
Part of the premises were for keeping stock, part the home of Ted, Ruth and
daughter Vera. Running from the corner premises to the house which is now no. 69
High Street (although it seems in Cromwell Way!) was the place to get one's
haircut or have a shave. This was a side-line that Ted had inherited from his
father. Barrie Simmons of Davis Crescent, like many other people who lived in
the village at the time, recalls it so well. 'Oh yes, I can clearly remember
going into the rather dark room and sitting on the board which Ted rested on the
arms of the chair when a youngster came in. A haircut then cost 3d." So
most long-time inhabitants of the village remember going to him to be 'tidied
up'. Vera Farey recalls going for a 'semi-shingle' cut and saying to him,
"That's enough, don't cut off any more. But he often did - just a little''.
Most village 'worthies' seemed to have had nicknames, many for reasons that
are lost in the mists of time. Frank Titmuss had been known as 'Ted Darkie'.
Irene Burton remembers that Ted, Frank's son and the owner of the Hardware
Stores from the 1920's, was fondly known by many as 'La-di-da' from his
delightful habit of singing this catchphrase as he went to a shelf to get the
customer's purchases. Both he and his wife always worked in the shop, no
assistants were employed for Ted and Ruth did the lot themselves. Cigarettes and
a few sweets were sold there but, as their daughter Vera Thrussell, now living
at nearby no. 61 High Street, recalled recently, 'Those were the days when you
did not try to compete with other shops nearby. There was a kind of agreement as
to who sold what.' No doubt this was part of the community spirit which
contrasts with the 'cut-throat' business in towns that we see so much of in
present times.
Vera still has a ledger belonging to her father in 1964; indeed the last
ledger used before he sold the shop. In the ledger are the names of some of his
major village customers, names like:
Milner Davis of 28 High Street, Claude Farey of 5 Royal Oak Lane, Laurie
Franklin of Walnut Tree Farm, E Hallworth of 49 High Street, J Thrussell of The
Orchard, Little Lane, Philip Walker of Royal Oak Lane & F. Weeden of
Cromwell Farm.
A glance at some of the items supplied to one of these in July 1964 gives a
measure of the range of items stocked in the hardware shop: Broom head, 4/6d
(22p). 2 foot rule, 5/11d (30p). 2 toilet rolls 2/6d (12p). Fly spray 3/9d
(18p). Distemper brush 8/0d (40p). A sickle 9/6d (48p). Paraffin lantern 19/6d
(98p). 2 tiles 7/0d (35p). Cycle bell 2/0d (10p). Plane £1.15s.0d (£1.75)
Almost every home in Pirton used paint from the shop and relied on Ted for
almost all items for decorating their house. There was a great supply of
wallpaper pattern books which customers would come in, take home to consider and
then return to order from Ted. Vera also recalls another much sought after item
from the shop. 'A lot more villagers used to have allotments in those days. Of
course, that was in the days when the present recreation ground was allotments;
my father used to loan out a seed drill for them to use. 3d. a time it was to
borrow it.' Ted showed further versatility by mending bicycles.
The first years at the shop was at a time before mains water had come to the
village. "We used to use the well that is now in Val Guess' garden. Then
when mains water came to the village (in 1935) there was just a standpipe which
supplied communal water to those around. We would all go to the tap with our
bowls and buckets...that continued for some time before water was put in to each
house.
Thus the shop served the village for nearly forty years. Ted died in 1959 and
Ruth decided to sell up five years later, in 1964. She moved to nearby 3 Walnut
Tree Road. The shop was still doing well enough, but this was a time when more
and more people were beginning to go to nearby towns to shop, when rural shops
were closing on almost a daily basis. Harold Massam who still lives in the house
next door but one to Ted and Ruth's old shop, remembers a Mr. Peter Davies
taking over the shop; ' a tall fellow with a stout wife'. Under its new owner
the shop continued for just two or three years. It was then converted into a
private house where Patricia & John Simpson, now in Nigeria, lived. A
photograph of Ruth, who lived to be ninety-nine, at the smart door of the shop
with the shop window advertising Aspro and Singers A1 Light tobacco remains a
treasured part of Vera's memories.