Parish Pump (CGA series)
Parish Pump was a series of articles that ran between January 1971 and September 1975 in The Country Gentleman's Association monthly magazine. Written by Julian Grey, the articles detailed life in a fictional East Anglian village between the 1930s and the 1970s.
Brief overview
[edit]"Ancient men full of guile, bigotry and craftsmanship supping from chipped mugs at an ancient settle, they are long gone. No Parish Pump remains the same forever, and ours - like all the others - has had to change with the times." (Jan 72)
Grey is a writer and a townie, and as such is initially viewed with much suspicion by the mainly agrarian natives when he arrives in 1937. However, over time he is accepted as a harmless, if dilettante, member of the community. He brings his family up and sees the village change as technology and social change reach the depths of the countryside.
Location
[edit]The centre of the drama is unnamed, but referred to as the community around the Parish Pump. This is one of three satellite hamlets[1] surrounding the more dominant Greater Seething. They in turn feed into a market town called Steepleborough[2] (May 1975). A parish council still exists[3]
Within the village
- The Parish Church, dedicated to St Mary, the Blessed Virgin (August 1973)
- One Non-Conformist Chapel ( Sept 75)
- The Village Hall (May 72)
- A post office ( Jan 73)
- An unadopted spur, Watchitt Green (May 72)
- Poacher's Wood ( Oct 75)
- The Greensward (Jan 71; passim)
- none of which approach in importance the true hub of the community, The Star and Wheelbarrow
Dramatis Personnae
[edit]Name | Brief description | Episode |
---|---|---|
Ossie Badger | Local poacher | Oct 75 |
P.C. Barter | Village Bobby | Jul 75 |
Old Mrs Barter | Village nag | Mar 74 |
Myrt Bilbury | Schoolgirl | Sep 72 |
Susan Bilbury | Grey’s new cleaner | Jun 73 |
Bert Billings | Love rival | Jan 74 |
Caleb Bingham | Local farmer | Mar 73 |
Corky Carter | Aged villager | Nov 74 |
Joseph Crane | Oldest resident | Nov 74 |
Barney Dean | Ex G.I. | Jul 75 |
Bob Grudging | Village timekeeper | Apr 73 |
Mrs Grisby | Wealthy widow | Nov 71 |
The Hartley Hales | Wealthy arristves | Mar 71 |
The Hollidays | Eccentric architects | Jun 73 |
Jasper Horncastle | Hall Secretary | May 72 |
George Laycroft | Smallholder | Mar 73 |
Maureen McGinty | Irish maid | Sep 74 |
Len Milliken | Village handyman | Jul 72 |
Jasper Pettigrew | Dandified roadman | Apr 73 |
Alfred Porson | Clive’s Grandfather | Aug 73 |
Clive Porson | Solicitor | Aug 73 |
Dave Porson | Father of Clive | Aug 73 |
Cyril Podger | Hypocondriac | May 75 |
Amos Pilling | Gambler | Sep 72 |
Rosie Randall | Mother of 6 | Mar 72 |
Ken Sparrow | Gamekeeper | Oct 75 |
Henry Stobbs | Thatcher | Nov 73 |
Maureen Stray | Village beauty | Aug 75 |
Sarah Stray | Mother of Maureen | Aug 75 |
Shiner Sparrow | Love rival | Jan 74 |
Marigold Upson | Grey’s 1st cleaner | May 73 |
Dr Wilkinson | Traditional medic | May 75 |
Unnamed characters These include
- The Squire: a distant and unobtrusive patriarch
- The General: retired Indian army with obligatory Labrador in tow
- The Vicar: earnest muscular Christian
- a Planter from Burma, and his wife
- The Editor of a Fine Arts Magazine
- A Hungarian lorrydriver
- Two drunk servicemen
Plot Summaries
[edit]The series ran from bi-monthly in 1971 and 72; then again in 1974 and 75; in 1973 a shorter, but monthly, article, appeared.
1971
- Jan pages 6 to 9: Introductory article - why strong walls make good neighbours
- Mar p95-97: An exotic London couple make their homes in the village
- Jul p275-277: Grey spars with his taciturn, obstinate gardener
- Sep p368-370: Deadly intrigue at the Horticultural Show
- Nov p445-447: A widow plans to sell a small meadow for development
1972
- Jan p9-11: A description of the village's original 3 pubs, now reduced to 1
- Mar p83-86: the uses the thriving village hall is put to
- May p148-151: The unadopted part of the village lobbies to be incorporated
- Jul p213-226: the village handyman is departing, much to everyone's dismay
- Sep p303-306: a local bachelor strikes lucky at the local races
- Nov p 453-456: The Sunday Newspaper "Boy" ( aged 86) retires
1973
- Jan p14-15: The Post Office Noticeboard
- Feb p74-75: A tenant farmer is selling up
- Mar p144-146: Mid week routines
- Apr p210-212: A new pub sign is universally disliked
- May p270-272: The Grey's faithful "Lady that does" quits
- Jun p338-340: A popular local "Beatt Combo" split
- Jul p400-402: The growing "Week-enders" trend
- Aug p464-465: A young Scion marries into money
- Sep p535-537: The Cricketing feats of yesteryear
- Oct p593-595: Organised poaching gangs visit at night
- Nov p656-658: A thatcher refuses to take no for an answer
- Dec p726-728: The new vicar causes concern
1974
- Jan p10-12: How Grey moved in one frosty New Year's Eve
- Mar p149-151: A portrait of the General
- May p272-274: A Hungarian tractor driver is well and truly lost
- July p385-387: An exact repeat (although not acknowledged) of the July 1973 article
- Sept p540-542: An Irish girl comes to work at the Grey's
- Nov p659-661: Two old comrades refuse to walk a quarter of a mile to see one another
1975
- Jan p14-16: Two very different soldiers are stranded in the village on New Year's Eve
- Mar p149-151: The pub's ancient settle is removed to make way for a fruit machine
- May p269-271: A portrait of the village's charismatic former G.P
- July p394-396: A former G.I. settles in the village and tweaks some time-honoured customs
- Sept p486-488: A description of the rivalry between the village and its larger neighbour
"There is no great amity, just a polite acceptance of the other's existence." (Sept 75)
References
[edit]- ^ The other two are PARSON'S GREEN (Nov74) and GOSLING GREEN(May 73)
- ^ Using the clues available to me I have tracked the small town to Halstead, Essex. The villages I suspect are Great and Little Maplestead.
- ^ Rural Governance