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View Full Version : I grew up round the corner from here.



Burney
04-10-2017, 11:05 AM
I spent half my childhood in that 'rec' and my primary school was on that road.

I remember it very fondly. Complete shïthole now, of course. :-(

http://www.standard.co.uk/news/crime/thornton-heath-shooting-gunmen-on-mopeds-open-fire-near-south-london-park-a3511076.html

Sir C
04-10-2017, 11:07 AM
I spent half my childhood in that 'rec' and my primary school was on that road.

I remember it very fondly. Complete shïthole now, of course. :-(

http://www.standard.co.uk/news/crime/thornton-heath-shooting-gunmen-on-mopeds-open-fire-near-south-london-park-a3511076.html

I often used to visit relatives in Thornton Heath in the 70s. To be fair, it was a ****ing ****hole then.

I was the victim of a mugging in Thornton Heath :-(

Burney
04-10-2017, 11:14 AM
I remember it as a place of endless hot summers, snowball fights in winter, riding bikes and playing without a care in the world. :shrug: That's childhood, I guess.

Actually, there were always bits that were rougher than others. Around there used to be pretty respectable (although some kid did get stabbed in the park around the time of the Brixton riots). Then white flight happened, of course.

Who mugged you?

Sir C
04-10-2017, 11:19 AM
I remember it as a place of endless hot summers, snowball fights in winter, riding bikes and playing without a care in the world. :shrug: That's childhood, I guess.

Actually, there were always bits that were rougher than others. Around there used to be pretty respectable (although some kid did get stabbed in the park around the time of the Brixton riots). Then white flight happened, of course.

Who mugged you?

I can't remember the name of the road, but it contained several families of Oirishers as well as my Oirish brood. Perhaps this is why my recollection is tinged with repulsion.

I suppose I was about 10 and walking along with my cousin when we were set upon by a group of big boys who took our few pennies and gave us a mild slap just for the look of the thing. I never told anyone out of a sense of shame.

I'm like a rape victim in many respects.

Sir C
04-10-2017, 11:23 AM
i remember it as a place of endless hot summers, snowball fights in winter, riding bikes and playing without a care in the world. :shrug: That's childhood, i guess.

Actually, there were always bits that were rougher than others. Around there used to be pretty respectable (although some kid did get stabbed in the park around the time of the brixton riots). Then white flight happened, of course.

Who mugged you?

sandringham road!

barrybueno
04-10-2017, 11:38 AM
I spent half my childhood in that 'rec' and my primary school was on that road.

I remember it very fondly. Complete shïthole now, of course. :-(

http://www.standard.co.uk/news/crime/thornton-heath-shooting-gunmen-on-mopeds-open-fire-near-south-london-park-a3511076.html

Did you see that Croydon asylum seeker kicking was actually Bridle Road? Good old Shrublands... glad my mum is well out of there now.

Burney
04-10-2017, 11:43 AM
Did you see that Croydon asylum seeker kicking was actually Bridle Road? Good old Shrublands... glad my mum is well out of there now.

Yeah. Funny thing about Shrublands is that it's not really the typical inner-Croydon shíthole the papers are painting it as. It's an ill-conceived rough housing estate that sits rather incongruously in some otherwise quite nice areas like West Wickham (which is Bromley, of course, but never mind) and Shirley.

Burney
04-10-2017, 11:44 AM
sandringham road!

Can you point to where on the doll Thornton Heath touched you?

Burney
04-10-2017, 11:45 AM
sandringham road!


Actually, Sandringham Road is more Selhurst than Thornton Heath imo.

Sir C
04-10-2017, 11:47 AM
Actually, Sandringham Road is more Selhurst than Thornton Heath imo.

Oh. The people who lived there described it as Thornton Heath. Perhaps they were confused, or possibly lost?

They were Irish, i suppose.

Burney
04-10-2017, 11:49 AM
Oh. The people who lived there described it as Thornton Heath. Perhaps they were confused, or possibly lost?

They were Irish, i suppose.

It's the difference between shīt and shīte, tbh. :shrug: