When The Police Told My Parents I Went In Pubs
My generation was nothing like as open with our parents as our children are with us, at least not in my part of the North of England, or maybe it was just me. I never told my parents I went in pubs. Not even when old enough. The police told them. It was Easter Sunday, 11th April, 1971.
It was the day after I had been with three friends to The Green Bottle in the curiously named Spawd Bone Lane, Knottingley. The pub was packed with noisy, holiday-weekend drinkers, and we took little notice of a short-haired man in a suit sitting alone at a table in the middle of the room until he asked us one by one to go over to have a few words with him. He was a detective investigating a vicious attack on an elderly lady the previous afternoon.*
I can still remember some of what he asked – name, age, address, where I been between 4.30 and 6.30 the previous afternoon, and where I worked. I told him I was a Chartered Accountants’ articled clerk with Goodwill and Ledger in Leeds (actually, I did give their real name), to which he said, “Oh! Do you know Mr. Black?” I said no, there was no Mr. Black where I worked, to which he replied that he worked at the Huddersfield office. It so happened that we did have an office in Huddersfield, and being naïve and trusting, thinking it a genuine question, I said I wasn’t sure but thought I might have seen that name on the letterheads, and that Mr. Black might be a partner at the Huddersfield office. It seemed to arouse the detective’s interest. I had never been grilled by the police before, and found it unsettling, although I tried hard not to show it.
The detective moved on to my friends, one of whom was in the middle of a Fine Art degree, with a bolshy “I’m an art student” attitude, full of the deep and mysterious philosophies to which such beings are prone. He was going through a phase of always answering straight questions with enigmatic answers, that’s if he could be bothered to answer at all. He had once been approached on a train in the Midlands by a woman carrying out a travel survey and told her he was on his way to Johannesburg. No matter who was asking, or how serious the situation, he took the same line. It was also the case, coincidentally, that he had the same surname as me, which drew the obvious follow-up from the detective.
“Oh! Are you related?” the detective asked.
“I suppose we must be,” he answered.
“What does that mean?”
“Are we not all related in some way?”
The detective was suspicious. Did he think I had given him a false name, that of my art student friend? We had a bit of a laugh about it afterwards.
When you consider the gravity of the situation, it was not really funny at all, but we were still at that stage of youthful innocence which takes little seriously. Without actually being part of it (as I said, I was a Chartered Accountants' articled clerk), we liked to imagine we followed the trendy, counterculture of underground bands and magazines such as Oz which was about to face an obscenity trial. You don’t realise now when you see old clips of bands such as Black Sabbath, just how excitingly anti-establishment they seemed, even in name. The police were joked about: you would see “Screw the Pigs” scrawled in four-foot letters on garage doors. This pushing of the limits, I would now say, was only possible because England, on the whole, was a much safer and law-abiding place than it is today, which makes the attack on the old lady all the more shocking. And of course, we did not yet know the awful details of the incident.
The following day, Easter Sunday, I was upstairs at home, going through the pointless motions of revising for my accountancy exams, when my dad called me down to the front room where two more short-haired men in suits wanted to see me. “These two gentlemen are police officers,” my dad said, “and would like to ask you some questions.”
Being the sort of person who feels guilty even if not (you know, when the teacher asks who peed on the floor and you go red, terrified she thinks it was you, even though it was someone else), it really scared me. I had to explain about the pub in Knottingley and about being questioned, and the two detectives went off satisfied, but it felt very awkward.
And that’s how my parents found out I went in pubs, although, they probably knew already.
There
is now no sign The Green Bottle ever existed. It closed for good
and was boarded up by 2009, burnt out in 2010, demolished, and the site
redeveloped as business units.
*From newspaper archives, I can see that the elderly lady
was 88 year-old Mrs. Dorothy Leeman. She had been beaten around the head,
bound, gagged and robbed of £80 on Good Friday in her roadside shop at
Hilltop, Knottingley, Yorkshire. She never properly recovered and died
less than six months later. It was an appalling attack and I don’t believe anyone was ever caught.
I remember being brazen enough to mention it to my mother, visiting the bar, having a beer. She was more disappointed than she let on. Yes, how anti-establishment we felt and behaved, while studying for exams. I've read Keith Richards autobiography, and Bruce Springstein's, and others. We weren't even close.
ReplyDeleteThanks for commenting. We tend to forget how authoritarian things were in the fifties and sixties. Your parents weren't your friends. Teachers and police were to be feared. You wouldn't complain to your boss about anything. Some would say things are too far the other way now, and perhaps they are. We might have thought we could be like Jagger and Faithful, but that's the myth of celebrity.
DeleteGreat article, it is always very interesting to see a perspective of someone older and wiser than you, thanks!
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