Adeline

Adeline was born in 1901 and was the fourth child of Walter and Emily Jane. She was known as “Addie” and her birthdate is 19th April. In October 1923 she married Sydney “Sid” Billingham in Kings Norton – they were both 23. Addy died in 1990 aged 88, whilst Syd pre-deceased here in 1970.

Addie and Sid are to the left (our left) of the lady in the black hat, which incidentally is Cecil’s Mother.

It would be fair to say that Addie was a difficult if well meaning person, and one who didn’t get on with all of the family all of the time. Rifts were common place. We must all speak as you find, and when I met her she was especially kind if rather gauche with a rather manly physique and rather a deep voice.

In 1946 she was living in Eddington, and I believe she Lived in Tamworth – I remember visiting her there with my parents. Sid died in 1970 in Lichfield at 69 having been married for 46 years. She died in July 1990 also in Lichfield aged 89.

Hazel writes:

When we were young my sister Cindy (Cynthia) and I (Hazel) used to visit Auntie Addie and stay with her occasionally in the school holidays. She and Uncle Sid Billingham had no children of their own, of course, and in those days she was fun and funny and she was very good to us.


Uncle Sid was a gentle man, always much more quiet and reserved, chewing on his pipe and smoking a wonderfully aromatic brand of pipe tobacco. We never had a telephone in the family home until after my Dad had retired and we had all long since left home. But Auntie Addie had one and I well remember Cindy and myself making our first attempts at using a public phone box. Even after 60 years I believe I still remember her phone number – ERD 3146.

I think her address was 66 Hollydale Road, Erdington. We used to live near Kings Heath so we had to catch a bus into town and then, in the early days, a tram to the Tyburn Road terminus. We’d walk up Holly Lane to Hollydale Road.
At one time Addie had chickens in the back garden and used to treat them like pets, sitting with her favourite one in her lap. She also had a little golden haired dog she called Chips or Chippy that was my favourite.

Addie was a primary school teacher or teaching assistant and confessed that she had, shall we say, ‘enhanced’ her qualifications on her CV to get the job! We went to Sutton Park, the local cinema and various places of interest.
In 1952 we went by train to the Festival of Britain in London. Being only just 9, I confess I don’t remember much about it other than what I was wearing!, being in a station and the ‘Skylon’ – a huge cigar shaped construction.

The following year we stayed with Addie to watch the Coronation on TV and take part in their street party, as there wasn’t one where we lived at home. Once we were of secondary school age we saw her less often, having new interests of our own. But then it seemed that Addie, always somewhat eccentric, had more and more bizarre ideas and was embroiled in, if not the cause of, family discord so we parted company at that stage.

I think that Uncle Sid died in 1970 when I was in New Zealand on a one year teaching exchange. I wrote to express my condolences and to say how much we appreciated all that they had done for us all those years before.

Addie wrote to me some time later asking me to visit and whether I’d be willing to be her executor, but Mum & Dad were still not happy about it so I thanked her again for happier times past and politely declined.

The last photo of her came via Auntie Ivy, I think. It is dated September 1976 and Addie must have died within the next couple of years but I don’t know when.

Oh dear. How sad. I felt so mean – but it was a case of filial loyalty v conscience.

Harry writes:
As far as I remember I had very little to do with Addie in the early years. I remember her as being quite male in her actions – slightly robust and challenging and loud of voice. I guess quite intimidating. Not towards the sensitive end of that scale. Slightly surreal and probably best described as eccentric. I don’t remember Sid at all. They lived in Tamworth but I think moved there from the Erdington* area possibly near Fred. I know we went there when I was driving, so that would be 1963 or after. I think we went to see her before that, through Fred, so again that points to Erdington*.

*I call it Erdington, but from Fred’s funeral, Ian drove us to somewhere not far from Yardley Wood Cemetry. Need Hazel to clarify this.

Graham EspinEdit

Harry mentioned that his mother had issues with aunt Adeline. I remember there was some type of rift which my grandmother appeared to agree with. I do remember visiting her with my family. She was a teacher and gave me a heavy storage box which had lots of colored pastel sticks. I remember thinking this looked more like chalk to me.

Harry writes: rufus3265Edit

Thanks Hazel, that brought back some memories too. Adeline’s photograph was I am sure the time Mom took her on holiday to the New Forest, which was about ’76.

Addie on holiday

I think Adeline picked a row, made some disparaging comments to or with the hotel owner. The following morning Mom bundled her into the car and drove them back to Birmingham, and then back to the Forest, to resume their holiday. Mom and Dad stopped at my house in Yateley on the way back home to tell me about the episode, and how she had apologised to the hotel owner. More eccentric and bizarre as you say.

Mom agreed to be her executor, and she made out a will in 1970 naming her.