For the whole of my life, Tony, my beloved brother and I have been there for each other. Maybe separated by distance these past years but not in our hearts. He’s always been there for me. There are many stories I could tell you about the scrapes he got us into, the times he rushed down to me as an adult,when I needed him. The wonderful holidays he and Lin shared with us in our cottage, in Monmouth, that he so loved. So many but I will select a few that will hopefully make you smile. Those who knew him as Grand dad, ‘Ampy, Dad, will, I hope enjoy the memories that I will pour out on this page.

One of my earliest memories of being with Tony, was in our first school. He had been at a Prep school in Portchester since he was 3 years old and then onto Castle Street Primary, Portchester, where I joined him when I was five. There was a paddling pool in the grounds and in the Summer we would all take turns in dipping our feet in, under the watchful eye of a teacher. We were told by the very strict headmistress, not to go near the pool without an adult. Tony and Mickey Rushin, his close friend and our neighbor, were messing around as boys do and Tony fell in. He was seen by a teacher and taken to the head’s office. To make a point, I think; wouldn’t be allowed today but no such things a pc in those days; Tony was made to wear a dress for the rest of the day. Very embarrassed but it worked, he didn’t go near the pool again.
We were both part of an organisation called the Woodcraft’ run by a local scout leader I think. Tony and I were asked to be part of the Portchester May Queen. I was to carry the train of her gown and Tony carried the cushion with her scroll on it. After this, we had dancing around the Maypole. My brother thought it would be fun to wrap the coloured ribbons around Josephine and me so that we were tied to the maypole. The leader of this event, was not best pleased and the tangle the ribbons were in was another story. I think I was laughing but not too sure, I know Josephine’s mum wasn’t. But another day, another memory for me to keep in my heart of my mischievous brother.

To understand the next memory, you need to understand where Tony was in the pecking order in our home. Well, he was his mother’s ‘precious pup’ and could do no wrong. I think we all spoiled him a bit, I know I did and I waited on his every whim. If he had told me the world was flat, I would have believed him. So when, on a sunny school day, soon after I had begun school, he came over to me while I was in the dinner queue and told me it was home time, I believed him. I joined him running out of the school gate, to get the bus I thought. But no. It wasn’t home time, Tony had been told off once again in class and decided he had had enough and so, with his ‘partner in crime’, he left for the day. We walked for a while and went into a walled ‘garden’ full of fruit trees. We had missed lunch and so were both hungry. We filled ourselves with freshly picked plums, apples and pears. After a while we left the garden and both feeling a bit unwell, I remember having a horrible tummy ache and Tony holding his tummy, as we sat on the pavement on the Portchester Road. A family friend, Aunt Nappin, saw us and asked why we were not in school, quick as a flash Tony said, ‘oh we are going to the dentist’. She waved goodbye and walked on. Eventually we made our way home, only to find Mother stood by the front door, arms folded. I knew what that meant. We hadn’t bargained for the fact that Aunt Nappin had been on her way to our house and said she had seen us on our way to the dentist! We, or rather in this instance, I, was in trouble. Tony was sent to his room and I was blamed for leading him astray. Did my brother own up? I will leave you guessing.
Tony, Mickey Rushin, his sister Josephine and I, had a den, under the ground on a piece of land, opposite the White Heart shop on the Portchester Road, that is now covered in houses. We had to crawl down a kind of shaft and had made seats out of old boxes and enjoyed many a picnic. When I think now, how dangerous was that! But children don’t do ‘health and safety’ and nothing awful happened while we played there.

We lived in a bungalow in The Crossways in Portchester, Mum, Dad after he retired from the Royal Marines, my two sisters, Georgina and June, Tony and I. One evening, Dad came into the sitting room and told us to listen and identify a sound. We heard a cry and Tony said, ‘it’s a cat, you have bought us another cat’. (poppet our ginger cat had recently died). Dad laughed, ‘no not a cat’. He led Tony by the hand and I followed into the bedroom that was Mum and Dad’s, only see the source of the sound, a tiny baby girl. A sister. That then meant, Tony was the only boy in a family of five. Shortly after this we moved to Gosport and into our Nan’s. Not sure why but that’s another story for another time. I do remember top and tailing in bed with my sisters, Tony sleeping on the couch and the baby, slept in a drawer.
We used to play in a park close to Nan’s and my favourite thing was the slide. Tony and his pals would go down the slide on a rusty bit of tin. I was quite a frail tiny child and one day, Tony had gone down but was sitting at the bottom on the tin. I was sat at the top waiting to descend. I shouted and he told me to hold on. I couldn’t, I found myself hurtling towards the aforementioned tin, held in place by my brother’s backside and yes, straight into my leg it went. On arriving home, I didn’t tell our Mother what had happened but did enjoy a trip to hospital for stitches, on the back of Dad’s motorbike. I loved that.I still have the scar and talked to Tony about this when we visited this Summer, showed him the scar and we both remembered the times we played and although he laughed, he did say he was sorry.
When he was around 10 years old and we were both at Holbrook school, he took on a paper round. The paper shop was right next door to our home. Thorne’s newsagent. The boys back then, had to go into the shop early, mark up each paper, fill up their bags and then go out and deliver them. Sometimes Tony would ask me to go in and mark the house numbers on and I never refused. Many times I went with Tony. He would sit on his bike, roll up each paper and point the house it had been ordered for. Who took the papers? Who braved the dogs? Who got soaking wet while Tony sat on his bike under a tree for shelter from the rain? Who had to run to keep up with him? Yes you have guessed, his little sister Carol Ann. If the weather was really bad, as time went on, even after he joined Bridgemary boys school, he would say he was not feeling well and couldn’t do his round. He suffered with Asthma but looking back, these occasions became numerous and he recovered very well. But only after I had said I would do the paper round for him. He did pay me though. He had 10 shillings and sixpence a week. He gave me the sixpence. Did I complain? Never. That’s love.
We had many homes, after Nan’s, eventually living in Brewers Lane, Bridgemary. Tony joined the Royal Marine cadets. Back then, there were no such things as stay bright buttons. Every button on his uniform,had to be clean and shiny, each polished individually. I did this for him relentlessly. Every single week. His belt and cap had to be whitened with ‘Blanco’. Very messy and I did this as well. All willingly. If Tony wanted anything doing, he only had to ask. We had a very special bond and we both knew that.
Then he joined the Royals as an adult, while he was shore based close by, the ‘cleaning and polishing’ continued. He went on many tours of duty and I missed him very much and was always worried for him. One year he had been determined to spend Christmas at home but his leave was to end 23rd December. He had Mum phone in to say he was unwell and couldn’t return to base. He did have a bit of a cough, that we put down to the cigarettes. A while after this, he was sitting in the kitchen, smoking and looking forward to having a great Christmas, when I saw a Haslar Hospital medics van draw up. I went and told him. I had never seen him move so fast. Up the stairs, minus a discarded cigarette, into his bed and looking sorry for himself. The Doctor from his unit I suppose, went up only to find him short of breath and very hot. He had just run up a flight of stairs and been smoking, but the doctor was concerned and admitted him to Haslar hospital. So much for spending Christmas at home. This was actually a good thing, he was found to have TB and so spent a long time in quarantine. I remember having to gown up every time I visited, taking cream cakes for him and the other patients. Whilst there I would read poetry to a very sick young man and watch my brother, flirt outrageously with the nurse. They all loved him. He was that kind of guy.
One of the early jobs Tony had, before joining the Royals, was in a men’s outfitters, he had previously been at the Landport Drapery Store,working. I was called to this outfitters, one afternoon, Baker and Co, I think it was called in Portsmouth, I was working in Southsea at that time. Tony had been sent up into the storage loft only to tread between the boards and end up through the floor. Not really funny but as he slipped through the ceiling of the shop window, he was seen with his legs dangling around the neck of the mannequin. So it did raise a laugh for passers-by, although his inner thighs were nothing to smile about later.
As we grew older, he would tease me, about boyfriends, laugh at me in a kind way, get me into more scrapes but we loved each other dearly. When the chips were down, we were there for each other. Even if at times, he couldn’t show me, I always knew.
When our eldest sister married David, I was chief Bridesmaid and Tony was an usher. He looked very dapper in his red tie and red silk cummerbund. Tony loved his clothes. He looked very handsome and knew it.

Tony agreed to ‘give me away’ at my first wedding to Lisa’s dad, Terry Brown. He joked with Terry saying he never ‘gave anything away’ and so would have to charge. They got on well. He was married at this point to a girl I thought a lot of, his first wife Lin. She was heavily pregnant with their first son Steve. Outside of the hairdressers from where Tony collected me, on a very wet windy November 12th,1966, I was glad to see he had brought an umbrella. At first it was over him, then remembering he was a gentleman, he held it over my head. It couldn’t have rained more if we had ordered it! The wedding was blighted a bit and part of me was very sad. As we were waiting for the car to collect us, Tony saw the tears. He reached into his pocket but didn’t have a hankie so said, ‘use your veil’. That was my brother.
There are so many more memories but need to use only a few.
Life went on, Tony and I were always in touch. After his wife sadly died, he met Lin his second wife and they went on to have 2 daughters. My nieces, Tina and Alison. Lin and I became very close and later as the years passed, shared our love of nature, the horses and my dogs .We shared many happy times together, when the children were young,my two girls, Marie from my second husband, Lisa, Terry’s daughter, Tony, Lin and their family, the girls and Steve. Going to Leigh Park gardens etc. All of us, such happy times.
Life went on and for a few years we drifted apart, which was sad and I regret that. I missed Tony a lot and had become fond of Lin and missed them all. But after a while, life returned to ‘normal’ and I visited or we, David and I, visited them and they us, often. Always having a lot of fun and a lot of laughs. Tony and I always tried to use humour in most situations. I could tell of many of these but not today.

Tony was an outrageous flirt when younger. He was sat in a café, during our brief estrangement, down to others, and saw a lovely looking girl at the counter. He was remarking to those with him on her beautiful look when she walked up to him and said, ‘Hello Uncle Tony’. He was shocked and surprised. The beautiful girl was my youngest daughter Marie, his niece. That could have been embarrassing.
When we moved to Monmouth, I was worried we wouldn’t see him and Lin but I was so wrong. They came and stayed close to us, for many a holiday.Not in the house because of his allergy to cats. He could stay all day, or we would go sightseeing, but couldn’t stay long in the evening when the cats were indoors. I loved these holidays, I loved having Tony and Lin there,sharing my lovely country cottage. Tony also loved it and found the whole place restful and relaxing. When we visited family back in Hampshire, Lin and Tony played host and hostess to us and we had many happy times in their flat.
I remember how proud he was when I gained my Masters and how he said he could see how I could help people. When I wrote my autobiography, he again was so proud. But the time I remember most was when my children’s book Wozwell was launched. We all went into Smiths in Fareham and he took it off the shelf it shared, with Roald Dahl and Enid Blyton, telling people his sister had written the book. He almost danced out of the shop, so happy and proud. I will hold these memories forever.
Tony wanted to ride my wonderful horse, Star. I was a bit worried but he said he would really like to do this and I knew she was solid and safe and would look after him. So we ventured into the local woods and with a great deal of help, and not elegantly, he mounted. Marie walked with them as they rode off into the ‘sunset’ as they say. On his return he was beaming. Saying it was great fun. I knew Star would keep him safe. We told him how to dismount, but did he listen? Of course not. Tony knew how to do this. Of course he did. As he begun, very unceremoniously, he slipped and fell. Not sure how but the position he found himself in was not one I had seen before. He didn’t help himself by laughing so hard. Lin and I couldn’t help him for the same reason. Eventually, after what seemed as age, he fell to the ground. Surrounded by woodland flowers and moss saying ‘Wonderful, Loved that’ through his laughter.
Whatever was happening in his own life or mine, we shared it and he would always manage to make me smile. He talked a lot of sense at times and we often gave each other advice. Whether it was taken is a different matter all together. Tony was a king of one liners. He could make you laugh even when you were at breaking point. That is why today, I need to write this blog. Thanks Tony for giving me so many memories.

So, although today is still very very hard, at a time my heart is hurting more than I can say, I needed to remember the good times, some of the fun times and also wanted to share these with family and friends. Some memories I am not ready to revisit but hope these will give you an idea of the man Tony was. The wonderful dad he was to his children and how they have dealt with everything these past few months especially, will wait for another day. These are a few of my memories that none of you will have, so I wanted to share the good times. The laughter and show his mischievous side.
Yes this is for you, our family, our friends near and far. But also for me and for my Big bear. My brother. My friend. My Tony ‘Loves you’.xx
Thankyou for reading xx
