G for Getting Older (turning 22)

This is the story of Will and his two friends who sailed to England in 1967 to see the world. Aerogrammes. letters, diaries and postcards help to tell of their adventures in this A to Z.

#AtoZChallenge 2025 letter G
“Birthday” Beatles 1968
They say it’s your birthday
It’s my birthday too, yeah
They say it’s your birthday
We’re gonna have a good time
I’m glad it’s your birthday
Happy birthday to you

52 Weltje Road, Hammersmith, London 6th April 1967

I had to meet a couple of girls (Michelle and Norma) from the Fairsea, at Victoria Station as they have just arrived from Europe and are staying here for a week.  It’s good to have some female cooked food for a change as somehow it tastes better. 

Meanwhile school was a bit hard to take after two and a half weeks Easter hols but we get a week’s holiday in eight weeks time (mid term) and besides, the kids are beginning to learn that  “What Mr Price says, goes”.

You asked about the flat and food. Well, it has worked very well in shifts for the cooking and there has been so much heckling, particularly if a crook meal is served, the meals have been reasonably good but the place gets a bit dirty now and then. Anyway the girls will probably clean it up this week as they won’t start teaching for a week or so and won’t get their flat immediately.

The hot meal at school is great. Today, for example, we had shepherds pie plus four vegs plus apple/blackberry crumble with custard for two shillings and fourpence.

Extract from Diary April 9th 1967

Birthday song for brekkie, coffee in bed.  Up for brunch.  Tube to Piccadilly Circus to show the girls London.

To Buckingham Palace, St James Park, Horse Guards, 10 Downing Street, Big Ben, Houses of Parliament, Westminster Abbey, Westminster Bridge, River Thames, Pavement Artist, Scott’s Discovery, Strand, St Clement’s Church (chimes), Trafalgar Square.  Tube back to Hammer.  Dinner, coffee, talked, discussed news from Home.  Bed 12.30am

Captain Scott’s ship “The Discovery”

School tomorrow!  How depressing after 2 ½ week’s hols.

21st April, 1967

Hi!  Received your letter. This is just a card we bought in Stratford. Michelle, Norma and I hired a blue Austin Mini for three days and we had a “delightful” weekend getting behind the wheel again and touring.  Left London Friday night and stayed at a pub at Cambridge the first night.  The university is quite impressive.  Then to Bedford, Northampton and Coventry where we saw the walls and steeple of Coventry Cathedral, built 1300 and destroyed by bombing in 1941. Stayed with Michelle’s friends at Rugby and saw the field where the boy picked up the soccer ball, started to run and rugby began.  Stratford is really beautiful and they fancy “Old Bill” quite a bit.  Many, many old buildings and his statue and name are everywhere.  

Shakespeare’s Birthplace, Stratford-upon-Avon Postcard John Hinds Studios Photo E. Ludwig

Extract from Diary Sunday, 23rd April

After 10 am breakfast 6 of us, Michelle, Norma, Keith, Phil, Ted and I caught the tube to Baker Street where we visited Mde Tussauds Waxworks.  Quite fascinating and very lifelike.  Australia was well represented in sports section with Brabham, Bradman, Marg Smith and Laver. Sir Robert (Menzies) was there.  Lady sitting on seat and train robbers reading newspapers. Battle of Trafalgar was quite realistic.

We thought it funny when Michelle asked a wax lady at the canteen did she sell chocolates.    Spent the rest of the day in Hyde Park at Speakers Corner watching the Yanks heckling anti-Vietnam speakers.  

I hear there’s a new pay rise for schoolies backdated to October (more brass for me).  Had a haircut.  First in four months. Food costs £2 a week.  Meat fairly expensive but I’ve put on over half a stone so am eating well.  Thank the club for singing Happy Birthday. Regards to all.  

Extract from Diary Sunday, 24th April

Flat was a hopeless mess.  Bods sleeping everywhere, clothes thick all over the floor.  Girls moved out to OVC (Overseas Visitors Centre). Met Fred at OVC and he moved in too. 9 for dinner!

52 Weltje Road, Hammersmith, London 26th April 1967

Hope the shock isn’t too great receiving a letter from me just after a card but I figured I’d better write a letter though yours and this one will probably pass in transit.  I had quite a good birthday.  The girls sang “Happy Birthday” and bought me a cake.  

Michelle and Will on his birthday

When the other blokes arrived back from Scotland they bought me a half pint of Bitters. Thanks for the $6.  I haven’t bought anything yet but will eventually have a splurge on clothes and will get myself a Harris Tweed coat for £5 and trousers are pretty cheap.  Sweaters look OK and are reasonably priced so will get one of these too.

Keith and Phil have bought a Morris 1000, 1961 van in good condition for £70 and are off to tour England, Scotland and Wales for two weeks and then to Europe as they are going to Canada for the start of the school year in September. Graeme and Neil have jobs in holiday camps so are moving as well, so Ted, a Canadian guy and Fred (went to college with him) have moved in and we’ll get a couple of others to share expenses.  The girls have got a flat but were cooking our meals for a few weeks before that. 

 Spent a good weekend checking out more of London.  Did a conducted tour of the Tower by Beefeaters, saw monument to the Great Fire, built 1671 and walked 311 steps to the top.  

View from the top of “The Monument” to the Great Fire of 1066. 311 steps high. Built by Wren 1671

Walked past Mansion House (Lord Mayor).  Bank of England, the Old Bailey and through St Paul’s Cathedral and down Fleet Street. Also had a ferry trip down the Thames. 

I’ve decided to stay teaching in London until end of term at least.  The boss wants me to stay for any number of years after that but no chance.  However, I might tour Europe for only the five week hols (summer vacation) and get back to London for two terms til following May, then to Europe and then to Canada in the following August.  But I haven’t yet decided.  I’m going to play it by ear.

Cheers (as the Poms say) and Cor Blimey, it ain’t ‘alf time to go.

E for England Swings Like a Pendulum Do

This is the story of Will and his two friends who sailed to England in 1967 to see the world. Aerogrammes. letters, diaries and postcards help to tell of their adventures in this A to Z.

#AtoZChallenge 2025 letter E
"England Swings Like a Pendulum Do"   Roger Miller •  1965
England Swings Like a Pendulum Do
Bobbies on bicycles, two by two
Westminster Abbey, the Tower of Big Ben
The rosy-red cheeks of the little children

52 Weltje Rd, Hammersmith, London, England 30-3-67

I received your letter with the clippings, photos and it gives me nostalgic feelings to see those bleary-eyed people who obviously have been drinking real beer. Don’t waste a drop of it. 

We are only 50 yards from the Thames River, where there is a sailing club (Enterprises, Fireflys, OKs and 14s) but you have never seen a worse place to sail.  They started a race at 6.00 pm the other night (winter) just on the turn of the tide and half the fleet went A over Z in the freezing water within minutes.  I met an Aussie from Speers Point who knew the 16ft mob and sailed skates etc.  

First flat close to the Thames and the Hammersmith Bridge

The Oxford-Cambridge boat race went practically by our door and all the Poms get very excited about this.  I saw the race on TV in Monmouth, Wales as Jan (a schoolie from NZ) and I, Graeme (one of the blokes in our flat) and Raewyn (schoolie from NZ too) hitched for a five day tour which started on Good Friday and took us about 500 miles through Oxford, Cheltenham, Gloucester, Monmouth, Swansea and Cardiff (capital of Wales), across the Severn Suspension Bridge (4th largest bridge in the world) and back to London. 

We stayed in Youth Hostels which are very good and cheap and one night in a little pub in the Welsh village of Brynmawr where the hospitality of the people and their liking for Aussies and Kiwis was amazing.  They sang us Welsh songs and shouted us pints of beer.  In the middle of one Welsh song they came out with “Up the Wallabies” and we all finished up singing “Waltzing Matilda” and “The Maori Farewell’. The night with supper and breakfast cost 7/6d each.  

The pub in Brinmawr

We passed by Aberfan where the 240 children died in a landslide disaster that flattened the school.  Over the whole trip we got about 20 lifts in cars, trucks and even an ambulance.  The people were very friendly and quite interested in Aussie. 

Tomorrow I’m taking off again for a week in Scotland, mostly Glasgow and Edinburgh and hope to get a tour of a whisky distillery (free samples) as the Scotch in Scotland is dearer than in Australia. I’m off by myself this time for a change.  I should be more mobile and I have to be back in London by Saturday to meet one of the girls from the Fairsea who disembarked in Naples and has been in Europe (Michelle).

We are living very well and the financial position is fair.  I think I’ve put on about half a stone, my hair is long (I haven’t had a haircut since Wollongong, over three months ago) but everyone’s hair is long in Pommie land anyway.

You should see some of these clothes! Talk about being way out gear! We are very keen on the mini, mini skirts though.  They’re nearly up to the neck!

I have seen quite a lot of the sights of London, but there’s so much to see it should take ages.  Think I told you we visited St Clements (Oranges and Lemons) built 1066 but destroyed, all but walls and steeple in 1941 and rebuilt. Also went aboard the Cutty Sark – she could do 17 knots under 32,000 square feet of sail – that’s faster than the old Fairsea.  

Will, Keith and Phil in Greenwich in front of the Cutty Sark

I stood on the 0 degrees Meridian, one leg in east longitude and one foot in west longitude at the Greenwich Observatory. Also have visited Carnaby Street (way out clobber), Soho (sort of a Kings Cross) where the strippers take off the lot, one after another but with no finesse at all!  Portobello Road is interesting with all its street stalls selling all sorts of junk very cheaply. Antiques are also very moderately priced and you should see all these shops selling old uniforms.  It’s the new craze in MOD gear.  

Portobello Road

I have been to London Zoo.  Pretty fair but wouldn’t say it was any better than Taronga Park.  We found a wallaby but didn’t see one kangaroo!  London’s biggest building is the GPO tower – 36 storeys.  We kill that with Australia Square of 50 storeys.  Oh well, the Poms will find out one day what a great place “Down Under” is.  Meantime we are having a great time looking at their country but we don’t knock the place to them.  Well, I’ll send you a card from Scotland.  Write and let’s know how things are.  It’s good to get mail from home and hear all the news.

PS

Saw my first colour TV yesterday.  Only fair but slight improvement on black and white.

PPS

Snowed here at Hammersmith yesterday but only lightly.

D for Dear Old England

This is the story of Will and his two friends who sailed to England in 1967 to see the world. Aerogrammes. letters, diaries and postcards help to tell of his adventures in this A to Z.

#AtoZChallenge 2025 letter D
"Streets of London"   Ralph McTell  •  1969
Let me take you by the hand
And lead you through the streets of London
Show you something to make you change your mind

Wednesday, 15th February, 1967

Hello!  Well, here I am writing this letter to you from a room with three beds (very comfy) at the Overseas Visitors Centre (OVC) in London.  

The OVC offered a range of accommodation services, a restaurant, entertainment venues, assistance with finding work, a poste restante and travel information for the Continent and for those wishing to return home. (photo from Blog set up by founding members of OVC)

We arrived in Southampton at 4 am this morning but didn’t get through immigration and customs until 12 noon.  It’s very exciting leaving the ship after those six happy weeks as lots of new experiences lie ahead.  I was rapt to get your two letters on the ship before we disembarked. So good to hear news of home and how everyone is getting on. I read them three times each. Congrats Dad, I never thought that you could sail that boat without me – looks like I was wrong.

We left the docks by coach at 1 pm today for 85 miles through the English countryside, past villages and into the city which we have seen little of yet.  I’m in bed writing this and the temperature is 29°F outside but so far I’ve not been too cold. At least they speak English here and the money system is a little familiar. Things so far don’t appear too cheap, but we will save money by not spending too much. Everything – the houses and roads, cars, schools, people, are much as I had imagined them to be.

21st January, 1967, Dear Len and Iris, Lennie, Steve and Keith,

(Ow yer goin’ mate. Orright?)

England is quite an adventure.  We stayed at Earl’s Court (known as Kangaroo Gulch because of the accumulation of Australians) for a week but at last we now have a “flat”.  At least that’s what it’s supposed to be.  In Sydney you’d call it a slum but in London it’s practically first class residential.  It should be as it costs 12 Guineas Sterling (AU$32) a week but we call it home and have decorated it with posters (of Australia) and signs and it’s much improved. Flats are very expensive, and prices are approximately Australian (some cheaper, some dearer) but pay is very low. We can’t understand why all Pommies don’t migrate to Australia.

The first flat at Weltje Road in Hammersmith. The accommodation was on the first floor with other tenants above and below. This is a recent photo from Apple Maps.

The tourist attractions however are endless and it’s a bit like a game of Monopoly as you stroll along Trafalgar Square to Regent Street, Oxford Street, Piccadilly, Mayfair, Fenchurch Street, Pall Mall etc.   We visited old Buckingham Palace to say hello to Liz but the guards wouldn’t let us in.  It appears I’ll end up teaching during my stay here although I would prefer something else for a change. £15 a week is big pay here in London Town.  The clothes here are incredible. 50% of the chooms are ultra conservative (bowler hats and brollies) and the other 50% wear the most way out Carnaby Street clobber.  There seems no middle of line policy.  As you always hear, London is cold and we’ve seen very little sun at all.

Well, three months here will be interesting but after that I’ll be doing a tour around England and Scotland, then we buy a car and head for Europe.

Extract from Diary 

Wednesday, 15th February, 1967

The girls woke us up at 6:30 am as we had berthed in the harbour at 4:00 am. Permission to stay in Britain six months was granted without trouble. We were excited to have reached our destination but apprehensive about things to come. OVC Rep met us and we were through customs without bother and to London by bus 85 miles away. English countryside and city just as imagined. Stopped at pub for first English beer. 

16th February

 Underground to Westminster and saw Houses of Parliament. Went to County Council to apply for job supply teaching.  Interview appointment made for Thursday. Strolled all over London. Went to bank and collected passbook, visited Australia House and read the Australian newspapers, then along the Strand to Trafalgar Square, Nelson’s column where thousands of pigeons don’t get out of the way. To Elephant and Castle for X ray. Must have walked 20 miles and have sore feet to prove it. 

17th February

 Covered miles in the tube (underground railway) which is fast and efficient. Out to suburbs for look at a flat. London Accommodation Bureau is helpful but not much good to us. Still looking for cheapest food – fish and chips, cottage pie and spuds – anything to keep hunger away.

18th February

Visited flat at Croydon very nice, dear and too far from the tube we think. Looked at half a house and saw another where board was 12 Guineas. Ate at the Curry Bowl for 5 shillings and twopence. 

19th February 

Moved out of OVC at lunchtime and into a flat at Hammersmith in afternoon. 12 Guineas per week for two bedrooms, share bath with four uni students upstairs, no fridge, pretty Spartan and dirty but it’s home anyway. Unpacked at last. Posters and cleaning will brighten things. At least we will save money on food and accommodation from now on. Had lunch at club with free dessert. Flat now looking at least livable. 

The view of the backyard from our flat. No-one ever went out there!

20th of February

Bed was fairly comfy. Shopping now under control. Buying food, utensils at cheapest rates. Roster for cooking and cleaning. To laundromat tonight as clothes are running out. Laundromat is very good, quick and all clothes are dry. 2 shillings a wash, sixpence to dry, sixpence for soap. Played cards, wrote  letters.

21st of February

 Still eating very well and fairly cheaply. Visited Earls Court to collect mail. Graham and Neil collected some Australian posters to brighten the flat from NSW and Queensland House.

Listened to Normie Rowe and Seekers on the radio pirate stations “Caroline Ann” and “Radio London”. Normie (Rowe) to appear at Hammersmith with Trogg,  Sounds Inc and  Gene Pitney.

 22nd February 

Interviewed for job supply teaching at London County Council. Appointed to Camden Westminster Borough with possibility of permanent temp job. Lunched at Double Diamond Pub near Big Ben. Visited Discovery, Scott’s ship on the Thames.

 24th of February

Phone rang in arvo. Schools LCC offered me a permanent position at Essendine Primary School, Maida Vale. Report on Monday. School starts 8.55 am. Head Mr Hepple. Keith offered permanent temp at Primrose Hill and Phil, supply at Brickfield School. They were very keen to give us permanent appointment to July. That’s too long but it will have to do.

Sunday 26th February

Up at 9.00am and caught a train to Liverpool Street Station.  Strolled up World Famous Petticoat Lane and surrounding streets where all sorts of hawkers and street sellers were. Lots of dressed up monkeys, swarming with people between 10 am and 2 pm. Bought a deer stalker (Sherlock Holmes hat £1) and GB army badge.  Visited Dirty Dick’s Pub, an amazing hotel where everyone writes their name on the wall. Visited the Tower Bridge and the Tower built by William the Conqueror in 1066.

Monday 27th February

Arrived at Essendine School.  Boss is OK.  Building is large and old but fairly well furnished. Staff consists of three New Zealanders, one Canadian, one American, one Australian (me) and seven Poms. Class is a 4th year class due for high school in July.  English schools are so different – attitudes are much more casual.  Kids are abour 45% West Indian with deprived home backgrounds.  Described by headmaster as “a little wild”.  Standards of work are not as high, but this is the “liberal” education.

Essendine School in 1967

Tuesday 28th February

The day was cold with snow that melted as it flaked down to the ground. School is very different to home as morning and afternoon cups of tea breaks are long.  There is very little playground duty (10 minutes a week).  Lunches are fabulous.  For 2/4 you get a full sized baked dinner with the lot, as much as you can eat and dessert. Kids haven’t worked out who’s boss but they will soon.

Wednesday 1st March Tuesday 28th February

Shero (Will’s headmistress in Australia) would haemorrhage at these schools.  Chaos is normal procedure.  Looks like I can have the job to the summer vacation if I can stick it. This will include pay for 3 ½ weeks but I could have an ulcer by then.

Neil and I are on cooking and washing up roster.  We have eaten quite well since we moved into the flat.  Pommies from upstairs visted the cave and Gus walked in with nine birds on a social visit.  Bed late again 1 am.  Must get some sleep one day.

Front view of the flat at “The Hammer” – the original inhabitants

Tues 21st March

Finished school today for three and a half week Easter break which is the end of 2nd Term.  Sherry Party in the staff room at lunchtime is customary for any staff member departing.  All delightfully cheery as class resumed.  Can’t help remembering Shero’s little “get-togethers” over lemonade after school amid the sparkling conversation.

The Swinging Sixties

AtoZChallenge theme reveal 2025 #atozchallenge

"I'll Never Find Another You"     The Seekers  •  1965
There's a new world somewhere
They call the Promised Land
And I'll be there someday
If you will hold my hand
I still need you there beside me
No matter what I do
For I know I'll never find another you

Three young men stand on the deck of the Fairsea waving to their families. They won’t see them for at least three years and will return as changed people. They will look back on this moment as the most significant of their lives and think that maybe nothing will ever be as intoxicating, thrilling or exhilarating as life in the “Old Dart”.

Our narrator, Will Price, was one of the three. They met at Wollongong Teachers’ College in 1961, qualified as Primary Teachers and had spent the last three years in their respective classrooms. Keith and Phil had been posted to tiny, remote, one teacher schools, meeting the daily struggles alone, with little or no help from the indifferent Department of Education. Will was placed in the western suburbs of Sydney with a “Headmistress from Hell”, who told him he would be better suited to life as a used car salesman.

It was Keith who inspired the others to dream of a better life. As the year 1966 came to an end the three friends had all but completed arrangements for their exodus. From left to right Phillip, Keith and Will are celebrating Keith’s 21st birthday.

We are fortunate that Will wrote frequently to his family. Those flimsy, pale blue aerogrammes were one of the only means of communication, along with postcards and slides (the cheapest form of photography). They reflect views and sayings which may not be considered politically correct in 2025 but are an accurate reflection of what it was like to be young and bursting with excitement in the “Swinging ’60s”. Out there, over the seas, was a big, wide world waiting to be discovered.

This is my 10th A to Z. Most of my blogs have been about family history or travel. I used to spend April frantically trying to complete my posts but now I spend a whole year intermittently working on them so they are ready to go on the day.

Before I close, my thoughts go to my friend Sue Martin who is no longer with us. She was an ardent supporter of my writing, giving me encouragement every year with her usual enthusiasm. She is greatly missed.