
1) Central Square/West Square/East Parade/Hawthorn Avenue.
2) Newlands - Ash Grove, Birch Avenue, Cherry Tree Avenue, Almond Grove, Elm Way.
3) Spring Bank/Northern Avenue, Sunningdale Avenue, Davy Crescent/Atkinson Avenue, South View Avenue, Highfield Grove (later enlarged with Horstead Avenue, Western Avenue, building going on into the 1960s).
Post-war we also gained the prefabs in Ancholme Gardens and Woodbine Grove (built as a temporary measure and long since demolished).
Many folk moved to Newlands, either side of the Second World War, from small two up, two down properties in the courts and alleyways running off Wrawby Street, which were then demolished to allow redevelopment.
As kids in the 1960s we always called the Spring Bank estate "The New Houses" which seems strange now, given their age.
Having lived in a Woodbine Grove prefab, a three-bedroomed terraced house in Central Square and right through the UDC's refurbishment scheme of the mid-1970s, I feel well qualified to pen these notes on the history of council houses in the town.
Could it be another BASH local history talk in the making?
The refurbishment scheme was horrendous. Imagine living within what amounted to a building site, especially if you were supposed to be preparing for important school exams. It's worth a BASH talk all of its own. Other folk, from other streets, would be able to add their own memories to mine. The great Ted Dodd did us proud one week, with a hard-hitting story in the Lincolnshire Times. But the UDC was on its way out, to be replaced by the new Glanford authority.
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