We put a short message in the Telegraph this morning referencing this site. So welcome if this is how you found this site.
You can also go to the online telegraph and find a longer announcement there with a picture of Mum.
Jeremy and his family listed a few endearing memories of happier, earlier times with Margaret. They are listed in no particular order below. Do please add any of yours as a comment underneath.
Tennis:
Margaret was a life-long tennis enthusiast and continued to play into her 70's at Ricky Lawn Tennis Club, where she was weekday member for 40 years at least. She loved Wimbledon Fortnight and the curtains in the living room were drawn every day from the start of play until the end of Match of the Day at 10pm. Lydia and Emily have recently enjoyed what Margaret would never have done - queuing up at 5pm for cheap late entry tickets into Wimbledon.
Gardener
She was a dutiful and meticulous gardener, growing annuals from seed each year, growing tomatoes, cucumbers, which were so bitter some years, and peppers and the family favourites - raspberries and gooseberries.
Cook
She was famed for her cooking and baking which fed dinner parties, family get-togethers and the deep freeze. She was one of the first to get a deep freeze and it was filled each year from the garden as well as Bejam, and more recently Iceland which she loved as a shop.
Home-maker
She kept a clean, well organised and totally decluttered house. Jeremy and Bryony were often charged with clearing out cupboards and rooms when we least wanted to. I could see her heading up a Channel 4 programme on the home and outshining Anthea Turner - not difficult.
Dedicated to the family traditions
I don't think we ever quite understood why we had to receive vast stockings each year, well throughout our adulthood, with rolls of binbags, car chamois leathers and sponges, all individually wrapped up. These had been assembled throughout the year from forays to Watford, Uxbridge and Milton Keynes. Anyway Christmas was very special and virtually unmissable. The Windsor pantomime was also a permanent fixture for many years and often involved very lengthy journeys for us to be there but united three generations beautifully.
Aran Knitting
There are many people in this world sporting highly complicated aran jumpers from 'Maggie May'. Mum seemed to have a brilliant understanding of arcane knitting patterns involving up to four needles and multiple row counters. She could control all that whilst watching the telly, minding a meal in the oven and keeping a fag alight. Only a woman could do that.
Grandchildrens' recollections
Emily and Lydia fondly remember staying with Granny and Grandpa and playing 'Taxi'; helping Granny with her latest mega jigsaw puzzle; playing with the special toys - Bryony's battery powered monkey drummer and the pinball machine, and being called 'Luvvie'.
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
An Announcement in the Daily Telegraph this morning.
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