Welcome to the Goldings Guest Book
** We APPROVE all messages before they are posted **
Add a message : back to Goldings.org : Search
There are now 5745 messages in our guestbook.
<<< 1 862 863 864 865 866 867 868 869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880 881 882 1149 >>>
Viewing messages 4356 to 4360.
CLIVE GILLINGHAM. Ex Somerset House Captain | c.gillingham1@btinternet.com
Jon Parsons is quite correct about Somerset House, we are still the best , and we kept our dorm clean and tidy always, and we won best dorm a few times while I was there. Happy ? of course we were.
The pantry was down the steps and on the left, so it was under Somerset House. I did staff room meals many times and enjoyed the perks, I used to help Mrs Darton move the linen baskets
also and she used to darn my socks for me, Alan Dearman will be green with envy when he reads this. Keep writing lads its good to hear from you all. See some of you at the Reunion
13 May 2008 - Hertford Heath

Jon Parsons
Bob Cox was thinking that the Head's Pantry might be partly below ground. It probably was, as the kitchen end of the building was lower than the panelled part of the building. There are the steps going down at the start of the stone corridor. The land at the Top Field side of the building is higher than on the Parade Ground side. So from the inside the windows would be high up in rooms 16, 18, 19, 22 etc. In the photograph on the forecourt side of the arch, the large window is the Staff Billiard Room (15) The smaller window is the staff pantry (16). In the photograph on the outside of the arch - where the oil tank once was I believe, the small window is, I think, the one belonging to the Head's Pantry. So it looks as though the head's pantry was directly below Somerset - surprised someone didn't lift the floorboards !!!. All this talk of ronuking floors, I worked in an Agricultural College Lab when I left school and we had to ronuk the laboratory benches with a hand held buffer like an old fashioned metal iron, wrapped in a cloth. Once we managed to get hold of the cleaners floor-polisher, lifted it up onto the bench but the vibrations caused the bottles of acids & alkalies to fall off the little shelves at the back. A couple of years later when working in Montague Burtons - the tailors as Saturday Sales - the youngest staff had to ronuk the floors with the ball on the stick. So Ronseal had quite a few buyers of their revolting product other than DBH.

I read somewhere that the shoes were large and heavy and had steel tips & heels - surely that would ruin the floors !! But you can see why the stone passage is so worn. Bob concludes his entry by saying that Somerset may not have been the cleanest, but probably the happiest - there seem to be more ex-Somerset's supporting the site, perhaps the other old boys are too busy cleaning !!

Had to send this to your email address as I couldn't see how to attach photos to the guest book. It was a surprise to see my first email turn up as a Story ! Thanks

Jon - the Outsider.


12 May 2008

Webmaster comments   Jon
I'm afraid we can't attach photos onto the guestbook but I will add them to the site on you story page.
Dave

tommy | black&white@thecottage.org
thats fine coming from hansen and lawrance as they laughed at lee dixon when he said fulham would stay up a month ago.even my mate jimmy hill reckons they are a pair of clowns
12 May 2008 - craven cottage

Hansen and Lawrence
Like Tommy Trinder,the whole team are a bunch of comic's
12 May 2008 - Brum Beat

tommy trinder | black &white@thecottage.org
c,mon you whites
11 May 2008 - craven cottage

<<< 1 862 863 864 865 866 867 868 869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880 881 882 1149 >>>
You can search this guestbook by:
Message : - Name : - All :
Please type some text:

- Guest book sponsored by PC Home Help (01922) 626 366 - http://www.pchomehelp.net -