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Sunday, December 28, 2025

What things used to cost! 1940s-60s cost of living in Marlow

This is a follow on from our previous lists of prices charged for a whole variety of items in Marlow up to 1939. It is compiled from original sources only including receipts, advertising, account books, letters, documents, trade journals and newspaper articles. Information from memories has also been collected and preserved by us. Thanks to those who have shared their information! If you have knowledge of Marlow costs in this period please get in touch - we would be pleased to add more info. It could be anything from the cost of a childhood chocolate bar to that of a house or piece of furniture.

You can read the pre 1940 cost of living posts here and here. And to put them into context see our list of wages in Marlow here

IN DATE ORDER s /sh = shillings d= pence in pre decimal currency.

Accommodation 

Freehold three bed, 2 reception house in Marlow near Station to buy, 1943= £1300.

Two rooms to let in Marlow with use of kitchen, per week, 1944 = 10s.

To let, 4 bedroom house with  large walled garden in central Marlow, per week  1944 = 10 guineas.

For sale wood and asbestos chalet, then in garden at Wycombe Rd. "Rubberoid" roof. 16 ft long, 12 ft wide, and 12ft high at apex, 1945 = £55.

Three bed detached house, with 3 reception rooms, 1 min from river, 2.5 acre garden and two garages, 1946 = £4,500. 

Double decker bus adapted for  accomodation purposes, with 2 rooms and wired for electricity. Ideal for weekend accomodation. For sale in Cookham Dean, 1947 = £130

Two bed 1 reception bungalow in Marlow Bottom with large garden, suitable for using as a smallholding, garage, 1949 = £2,350.

Three bed, two reception room timber and asbestos (!) bungalow with large garden in Marlow 1950 = £2,150.

Four bed house on outskirts of Marlow with greenhouse and large garden 1950= £5,000.

Three bed "detached artistic Semi-Bungalow residence of character" Close to centre of town, station and river. 2 reception rooms & garage, 1951 = £4350, open to offers. 

Two bed pre-fab bungalow with garden, Marlow Bottom, 1952  = £850 (a case of buyer beware here! Such "temporary" style homes which proliferated at Marlow Bottom were under threat of clearance by the council at the time.

4 room cottage with no bathroom, but does have mains gas & electricity, 1953 = £950 freehold. 

6 acre site off Winchbottom Lane, "ideal for a weekend caravan site" 1953 = £600 to buy.

Rent of small furnished cottage Station Rd, 1 bed, 1 reception room, plus kitchen and WC but no bathroom, 1954 = £10 8s a month. 

Bed & Breakfast at the George & Dragon, 1955, with hot and cold running water in all rooms = 7s 6d a night and up. 

Luxury 2 berth residential caravan at High Heavens, Marlow Bottom. Flushing toilet, electric, gas, and fitted carpet. 1955 = 3&1/2 guineas a week. 

Newly built three bed detached house with brick garage, 1 min walk from station, 1956 = £4,150.

2 bed 1 reception room bungalow in Marlow Bottom with 1 acre garden and garage, 1958 = £2,750.

Single furnished room to rent, with use of kitchen and bathroom. Central Marlow, 1958 = 35s a week.

Recently built 3 bed bungalow close to river and with central heating, 1963 = £5,850.

To rent in West Street, bed-sit with use of bathroom and kitchen. Free hot water and clean sheets provided! 1963 = £2 10s a week. 

Detached 2 bed 2 reception bungalow in Marlow Bottom, with pink bathroom suite, garage and 1/2 acre garden partially "uncultivated", 1964 = £4,500.

2 bed maisonette near town centre with garden, 999 year lease, 1964 = £3,700.

Small 2 bed cottage, recently modernised with re-wiring and new plumbing, room for a garage 1964 = £2,850.

To let, 3 bed semi near town centre, unfurnished, with garage, per week, 1964 = £6 not including bills.

To let, large 6 room self contained flat in central position, unfurnished, 1964 =  £5 5s a week including bills. 

22ft (which was average) secondhand residential caravan at Westhorpe Caravan Park, Little Marlow, 1965 = £235

"Luxury maisonette", 2 beds. With garage. Own small garden. For sale 1966 = £4,500

Furnished one bed, two reception flat with garage to rent, 1966 = 7 and a half guineas a week.

Three bed bungalow on Marlow Lock Island  with central heating, a garage, a "sun lounge" and mooring for a boat, for sale 1967 = £7400.


For the home and garden:

Box of matches from R Brown grocer 1942 = 1.5 pence

Two dozen mixed bedding pinks, as ordered for the gardens of Remnantz West Street, 1945 from Allwood Bros nursery = 17s including carriage. Their mail-order catalogue cost 1d. 

Second hand marble topped wash stand, with jug and basin, bought at Marlow Bottom, 1945 = £5 10s 

Second hand double size iron bedstead, 1945 = £7 10s

Used electric washer with rubber roller wringer, green enamel, "pre war quality", 1946 = £40

Ex US Army safe, unused, with "burglar proof locks". Available in a variety of attractive colours! From Marlow Engineering Co, Hayes Place, 1947 = £10 10s or £12 10s which represents a heavy discount on original price they say. A lot of army surplus materials were being offered locally this year. 

Second hand HMV battery powered wireless set, sold 1947 = £5.

A bag of seasoned logs for your fire from Toomers in Station Approach, 1948 = 3 sh 6d (delivered). Discount for buying 20 or more.

Rolls of wallpaper from Lynch's Paint Shop, Chapel Street, 1949 = from 3sh 11d a roll.

Post Office wireless licence, 1949 = £1 per year covering all radio receivers in the household except those in any paying lodger's room plus occasional use of a portable set away from home "at picnics, boating parties and so on". Does not cover any radio receivers installed in caravans or vehicles you own for which you would have to pay another £1. 

Combined radio and TV licence, 1949 = £2 per annum

"Gaily striped deck chair", in rot proof canvas and wood from Morgan's (now part of the company  McIlroy's) High Street 1949 = 31s 11d. 

Family size box of the new Surf washing powder (for laundry), various Marlow suppliers, 1952 = 1s 11d

12 inch t.v qv from Marlow Electrical Services, Electric House, High Street 1953 = 65 guineas 

12ft by 9ft Indian carpet from Oliver's of Marlow, 1953 = £37 16 shillings.

3 piece suite (sofa was a two seater), with loose covers ordered from Morgan's Marlow ,1953 = £39 19sh 6d.

Second hand dining room suite consisting of a drop leaf table, 4 chairs and a sideboard, from Taplin Upholsterer (and used furniture dealer), Oxford Road, 1954 = £12 10s

Walnut bedroom suite, second hand, comprising 4ft 6 bed, wardrobe, dressing table, tall boy. From Taplins Oxford Road, 1954 = £45

Kidney shaped dressing table from Olivers of Marlow, High Street, 1954 = £3 10s

"Oak colour" dining suite - sideboard, table, 4 chairs, from Alan Hunt, Market Square, 1955 = 27 and a half guineas or can pay deposit then installments. 

Alarm clock battery powered  "now perfected" from Bailey's West Street 1956 = £8 5 shillings 

Set of a cocktail sideboard with light fitting, table and 4 chairs. From Alan Hunt, Market Square, 1958 = 49 and half guineas or available to hire purchase with £10 19s 6d deposit. 

6x4ft garden shed from D Lynch, Chapel Street, 1958 = £15

Second hand Royal Typewriter, 1959 = £25

Hand agitated table top clothes washer with wringer, 1959, used = £7

"The most advanced television of the year"- the Sobell slim portable TV with VHF radio and forward facing speakers, from Bodwell's 1960 = 62 guineas plus 2&1/2 guineas etc got a remote control

Brobat bleach, from Co operative stores, Station Rd, 1961 = 11d plus 1d bottle charge. 

Pack of 4 Andrew toilet rolls, Co Operative stores, Station Rd, 1961 = 3s 6d

T.V rentals from Bodwell, West Street 1963 = from 10 shillings a week. Platts Radio Shop in Quoiting Square (next to Platts garage) also hire TVs. In 1964 they are available from 8s 6d a week. Choose from Pye, Bush or Murphy brands. 

A dozen geranium or dahlia plants from Spinfield Nurseries 1963 = 18s. 

Almost new 3 piece suit in moquette with zipped covers, 1963 = £18

Cost of dry cleaning a double blanket at C.L.E.A.N dry cleaners, Little Marlow Rd, 1963 = 6s unless satin edges in which case 6s 6d  

Set of 4 chrome plated garden hand tools with wooden handles, from the House of Chalk (aka C A Chalk & Son), 1963 = 15s 

Gallon of emulsion paint from Lynch's Dean Street, 1963 = 27 sh 6d.

Second hand Parker Knoll wing chair, 1964 = £5

Wycombe Rural District Council sells "air dried manure" from the Little Marlow sewage purification works, 5 cubic yards, 1964 = 30s delivered. 

Cotton tea towel from A E King, Spittal Street, 1964 = 2s 6d

Gaslux gas powered fridge, 4 cu feet capacity and ice box, from North Thames Gas Board, 1964 = £35 14s, not including fitting.  Hire purchase also available 

"Revelation" record player, from P A Baker, Spittal Street, 1965 = 10 and a half guineas (special offer price) 

One load of washing done at the coin operated Launderama in Spittal Street 1965, = 2 sh.

Belling 2 bar electric fire from the showroom of Browne and Sons  in Maple Rise, 1965 = £13 18sh 1d.

The Ship brand box of safety matches, from The Tuck Shop West Street, 1966  = 3d

Bendix fully automated washing machine with spin dryer function, from Davies and Dean, West Street 1966 = 110 guineas or 150 guineas for one with tumble drying function too.

Phillips twin tub washing machine, from Davies and Dean, West Street 1966 = 78 guineas plus 3 guineas extra for a heat proof work top to sit on it.

Frigidaire spin dryer from Davies and Dean, West Street 1966 = £23 10s or £25 10s for one that automatically switches off. 

Kenwood Chef - "the world's most advanced food preparation machine", includes bowl and mixing attachment, other attachments extra, from Davies and Dean, West Street 1966 = £31 10s

Cup and saucer, bone china, from Treasure Chest, West Street 1966 = 6 sh 9d.

Latest model Bush 4 speed auto record player, from Direct Discounts, Spittal Street, 1967 = 22 guineas (special offer price) 

"Masterradio" 3 channel 19" TV from Direct Discounts, Spittal Street, 1967 = 49 guineas (sale price)

Sobell Stereogram (radio, record player and speakers combined in a cabinet) from Direct Discounts, Spittal Street, 1967 = 39 guineas (special offer price) 

Axminster broadloom carpet, from Norman Heals, High Street, 1968 = 42s 6d a square yard. 


Childhood

Second hand pram with canopy as sold in Marlow, 1946 = £2 10s

Boys jacket and "knicker suit" made to pre war quality, from Morgan's, 1945 = 29s 7d or 55s 6d for wool worsted version. (8 ration coupons also needed of course).

Girls long sleeved wool dress, from W E Applegate drapers and clothier, 1949 = from 23s

 Velour snowsuit with hood attached, for young child, from W E Applegate, 1949 = from 29s 2d (price goes up with the age its intended to fit) .

The amount charged per hour for the babysitting services of Mrs Allan of Holland Road, 1951 = 2s.

Girls gym tunic from A E King, 1952 = from 26s 9d for the smallest size. A navy regulation school coat from the same started at 79s 6d with school berets from 5s 11d.

Second hand Triang Pedal car sold in Marlow, 1953 = £2.

"Dainty but hard-wearing" summer dress for little girls in "gay patterns" , from Arthur Rowe Ltd, West Street, 1955 = from 15s 11d for toddler  - 64s for a "young miss". 

Child's leather school shoe with rubber sole and reinforced toe, from Milward's, High Street, 1958 = from 20s 9d for size 9.

Heinz Baby food from Dorsett's grocery shop Market Square, 1962 = 8d. Reduction for buying a half dozen.

Second hand Marmet pram with sun shade, Marlow, 1963 = £14.

Canvas school satchel, from W H Smith 1963 = 15s 6d.

Baby's car seat from shop "Adinda" in Chapel Street 1963 = £2 9sh 6d


Personal Care / Health 

Tin of Eucryl tooth powder (various Marlow suppliers), 1944 = 9d, large 1s 3d .

Phillips Tonic Yeast- treats indigestion and prevents nervous breakdown (!) from all Marlow chemists, 1950 = 1 sh 3d.

Boots Gardenia bath cubes, per box, 1951 = 3 and a half pence.

Hair cut in your home by travelling hairdresser who covers Marlow, men only, 1960 = 2s 6d or 2s for boys or OAPS. 

Elizabeth Arden Blue Grass gift set consisting of dusting powder, hand lotion and 2 bath cubes, from Watson's chemist Spittal Street, 1962 = 23s 6d.


Business costs:

Purchase price of The West Street Cafe, 1945 = £550

The Empire "Aristocrat" portable typewriter, from W H Smith & Son, 1955 = £22 10s (available on hire purchase too).

Hire of a cement mixer, including delivery from Marlow Bottom, 1959 = £2 a week.

Extra strong builder's wheelbarrow with rubber wheel, from Lynch's Dean Street, 1963 = 77s 6d .

Rent of small 2 room office suite near centre of Marlow, with own entrance, 1967 = £350 per annum exclusive of bills. 


Food and drink 

Jar of pickle from R Brown grocer High Street 1942 = 1 shilling 1d.

6 oz cheese from Browns as above 1942 = 5 shillings.

2 eggs from Browns as above 1942 = 5d.

A tablet of jelly from Browns as above 1942 = 2&1/2d.

2 lbs nuts from Browns as above 1942 = 14 shillings.

1/2 lb Brooke Bond Dividend Tea 1942 = 1s 5d  various stockists. 

A bottle of orange juice (available to young children and expectant mothers only) picked up from the library or infant welfare centre (both in what is now Liston Hall) or distribution volunteer Mrs Watson at Marlow Common, 1943 = 5d.

1/4lb carton of Rowntree's cocoa powder, various Marlow stockists,  1944 = 5d 

Half bottle of Johnny Walker Red Label, 1945, various Marlow suppliers = 13s 6d (notice is given that supplies are low and are likely to be scarce for foreseeable future.)

A dozen cans of vegetable and tomato soup (the most popular flavour), delivered to Marlow from Imperial Food Stores in High Wycombe, 1946 = 8sh 6d. 

1 dozen small sausage rolls from Burgers bakers, Causeway 1953 = 2s 2d shillings.

A gallon of ice cream from Burgers as above 1953 = 12 shillings.

1 dozen croissants from Burgers 1953 = 3 shillings.

Packet of Smedley's Quick Frozen garden peas, from H & J W Aldridge, Market Square, 1954 = 1s

1/4lb box of Brooke Bond P G Tips tea, from various Marlow shops, 1955 = 1s 9d.

1/2 pint of Wethered's Best Bitter, public bar price, 1955 = 9&1/2d.

4-oz Maxwell House coffee from the Co operative stores, Station Rd, 1961 = 4s.

Jelly tablet "table jellies" to make 1pt jelly, from Co operative stores, Station Rd, 1961 = 6d (reduction of 3d from price elsewhere they say). 

3lb bag of "Suprema" self raising flour, Co operative stores, Station Rd, 1961 = 1s 6d.

1lb of C.W.S lemon curd, Co operative stores, Station Rd, 1961 = 1s 6d.

1lb of C.W.S custard powder, Co-operative stores, Station Rd, 1961 = 1s 5d.

12oz tin of "Wheatsheaf" pork luncheon meat, Co-operative stores, Station Rd, 1961 = 2s 8d.

A dozen new laid eggs, medium size Co operative stores, Station Rd, 1961 = 2s 6d.

Fixed price lunch at Compleat Angler hotel, as available to non guests on certain days, 1961 = 25s Saturdays, 30s Sunday or Monday. 

Bottle of Chateau Libertas South African red wine from the Coach and Horses West Street, 1962 = 10sh 9d.

Shoulder of English lamb, from Jeffries, Spittal Street, 1967 = 3s.

1lb butter from C & Q food market, Oaktree Rd, 1967 = 2s 9d (offers green shield stamps with purchase) 

3lb 2oz size fresh chicken C & Q food market, Oaktree Rd, 1967 = 2s 9d. 

Packet of Jacobs or Crawford's Cream Crackers, from Home & Colonial Stores, High Street, 1968 = 12d

Quarter pound of P G Tips tea, Home & Colonial, 1968 = 1s 4&1/2d.

Packet of McVities Digestive biscuits, from Home & Colonial, 1968 = 9d.

Special luncheons served weekdays at Sun Ya Chinese restaurant, Quoiting Square, 1969 = 5 shillings.


Reading material:

Premium or Preferential annual membership to W H Smith's circulating library, High Street, 1942 = £2 3s. This lets you take in the very latest titles. A cheaper option is A grade annual membership which gives you full access to the library, minus those tempting latest releases. And B grade membership costs 10s a year for access to a more limited range of books, all of them a bit older. In 1949 you could subscribe a few pence a week to borrow on an occasional basis. Then the premium membership had risen to £3 a year. 

Latest fiction to borrow from H Simpsons High Street, per week 1945 = 2d or 3d

Copy of The Telegraph newspaper, 1948 = 1&1/2d. 

Copy of The Strand magazine, 1949 = 1s 3d.

Copy of the Bucks Free Press 1951 = 3d. 

Copy of Woman's Weekly magazine, 1952 = 3d.

Hard back books ideal for Christmas gifts such as the History of England by Arthur Bryant and Exploration Fawcett, the real life journals of lost explorer Colonel Fawcett, from W.H Smith High street, 1953 = 15-16s. 

Phillips modern school atlas, from W H Smith, 1963 = 11s 6d.

Copy of the weekly Marlow and District Times newspaper, 1969 = 4d. Published each Wednesday. 


Hobbies and leisure:

Entrance into a travelling circus and zoo which came for two days to a field off Dean  Street in 1943, = from 1 shilling for children, 1 shilling 6d for adults.

Second hand tennis racket and 5 balls, collect Marlow Bottom, 1944 = 57s 6d.

Second hand 15ft caravan, 4 berth with Calor gas lighting and heating, 1944 = £460.

Ticket to see a dance band at the Band Hall plus the local heat of Miss Buckinghamshire 1945 = 2s 6d, or 1s 6d if in H.M Forces.

1 weeks holiday as organised by The Central Council For Physical Recreation at Bisham Abbey for those aged 16-35. Includes board, basic lodging and expert tuition in a sport of your choice out of: lawn tennis, bicycle polo, rowing, football, canoeing, swimming, wrestling, table tennis, fencing, ball room dancing, soft ball and athletics, 1947 = £3 15s

Coach trip to New Theatre Oxford from Market Square Marlow, by Thames Valley Traction Co, 1949 = 9s 9d including the theatre ticket. Runs twice a week over winter season. 

Book of Buckinghamshire footpaths for walkers, sold at all Marlow booksellers, 1949 = 8sh 6d.

Admission to the Regatta enclosure, June 1950 = 7/6. Plus teas from 2 shillings and lunches from 3/6. Official programme 1 shilling. 

Programme for the Marlow Choral Society concert version of Tom Jones, at the Church Hall, December 1952 = 6d. 

One of the latest fully equipped caravans, the "Marlow Tudor" from the Marlow Coach Building Works, New Town Road, 1953 = from £445 (display ground was in Loudwater). In 1952 the 20ft 4 berth Marlow Tudor with aluminium skin, oak paneling and three rooms is £650. 

Boxing Day "Tyrolean Dance" at the Complete Angler hotel, 1953 including dinner = 30s. Evening dress required. 

20 Matinee brand deluxe tipped cigarettes, 1955 = 2s 8d.

Tickets to Marlow Young Conservative "gipsy dance" at the Crown hotel, 1958 = 5 shillings.

Rent that Marlow Park Cricket Club pay to use the cricket pitch in Higginson Park, per annum, 1958 = £70.

Tour of London Airport with return coach travel from Marlow, as run by Thames Valley travel, 1959 = 4sh 6d.

Ticket and coach transport from Marlow to Puss in Boots Pantomime at Oxford 1959 = 12 sh 3d.

Entry to local art and craft exhibition at Court Garden in 1959 = 1 shilling.

The Clarion "transistorised tape recorder", 50 hours play on 4 torch batteries, complete with microphone and tape, from M W Keen, High Street, 1959 = 25 guineas. 

11 ft Penn "car top" sports boat, from Willan Cars, High Street, 1960 - £69 10s.

 Seven day coach tour trip centered around Grange Over Sands. Includes luxury coach travel, full board hotel accommodation including gratuities, and sighting tours with meals en route. Book at the Thames Valley booking agent, corner shop, Market Square. Join at Wycombe, Maidenhead or Henley, 1963 = £29 10s. 

As above but to South Devon, trip based at Torquay, 1963 = £22 10s.

Ticket to a dance at Court Garden with band "Danny Lawrence and The Trends" - 7.30-1030pm. "Rock! Jive! Twist!", 1963 = 4s.

The Canonette 8 cine camera from Keen's, High Street, 1964 = £49 16s. Installment plans available 

Entry to Borlase summer fete and "Go Kart meeting", 1964 = 6d including a programme plus half a crown (2s 6d) for a go on a go kart. 

13ft touring caravan, second hand, 1964 = £55.

Coach trip to Whipsnade Zoo from Marlow, runs every summer Sunday, 1964 = 6s 6d. No reductions for children! 

Weekly entry into Postal Bingo (games called on Radio Luxembourg, 6 times in week), 1964 = 3s 6d (plus one off membership joining fee of 2s 6d) Top prize is around £6000..

Pack of 20 Players gold leaf Virginia tipped cigarettes, various Marlow stockists, 1966 = 4s 7d.

15 day holiday to Mallorca from Carters travel agency in West Street, 1966 = From £37 per person.

Admission to air display at Wycombe air park, Booker, 1968 = 30s for a car and all occupants or £7 10s for a coach ditto. 


Clothing/ Footwear/ Accessories :

Cleaning and pressing of a suit or dress at Allwrights cleaners, Spittal Street 1942 = 4s 

Ladies' long sleeved poplin shirt, plain colours or stripes, from Morgan's, High Street, 1945 = 42s 9d (plus you needed 4 coupons from your clothes ration).

Second hand gents navy blue sports coat sold in Marlow, 1945 = £4.

Latest fashion handbags in choice of 6 colours from Morgan's of Marlow, 1949 = 19 shillings 11d.

Beaver fur gloves from W.E Applegates (ran by A.E Kings), 1949 = 39 sh 4d.

Men's slippers from Milwards, High Street, 1950 = from 12 sh 9d to 31sh 11d.

Ladies lace trimmed nylon underwear set, from A E King, 1953 = 48s 6d.

Initialled set of 3 coloured handkerchiefs, from A E King, 1953 = 5s 6d boxed. 

Fur backed wool lined gloves, A E King 1953 = 39s 11d.

Ladies all wool house coat (dressing gown in this instance) with zipper front, A E King, 1952 = from 57s 6d depending on side. 

Gents tweed suit, all sizes, W J Daniel, High Street, 1958 = from £8 9s - £13 13s.

Ladies sling back high heel shoes, in black, gold or silver, Millward's own label range, from Milwards in the High Street 1964 = 55s 11d.

Ladies full length quilted dressing gown, from A E King Marlow branch, 1964 = 72s 6d .


Pets, livestock & equestrian 

Rhode Island Red Cockerel from breeder at Marlow Common, 1944 = 8s.

Fully grown goose, bought from Munday Dean, 1946 = 40s.

Green budgie, 1955 = 10s.

Horse for hacking from Peter Pinches horse dealer etc at Field House Farm, near Newtown Road Marlow, 1958 = from £50.

Chihuahua puppy, female, 1964 = 15 guineas.

6lb block of Dinnadog frozen dog food, available from G E Stevens, corn merchant etc, 1964 = 7s 6d.


Transport:

Second hand Raleigh gents bicycle with dynamo lighting for sale in Marlow, nearly new, 1944 = £12 

Adult return bus bare from Marlow to High Wycombe, 1946 = 11d.

3rd class season ticket for rail travel between Marlow and Paddington, valid for 1 month, 1948 = £5 13s 6d. A weekly ticket for the same journey cost £1 0s 11d. 

1938 Singer Super 12 car, low mileage, offered for sale in Marlow 1949 = £300.

Double garage for hire in Marlow, 1949 = 15 sh a week.

Coventry-Eagle cycle, "The Exemplar" model. "Britain's most modern bicycle". From B.T.C Cycle Dealers, Spittal Street 1952 = £21 9s 6d.

Bus fare from High Wycombe to Marlow on one of the extra busses put on by Thames Valley Traction Co on the occasion of the Marlow regatta, 1952 = 1s 1d return.

Hiring a car in Marlow for the weekend, 1953 = £3.

Special GWR cheap day return ticket to Newbury for the horse races, 1953 = 9s 6d.

Second hand 3 speed ladies bicycle with new tyres, 1954 = £7.

1950 Morris Minor with detachable hard top and heater, sold by Currall's Garages, 1955 = £420

Day return to Eastbourne, from Marlow, on coach run by Carter's of Maidenhead three times a week in summer, tickets from Silvester's newsagent, West Street, 1957 = 9s 6d. (also goes to Brighton, Worthing, Hastings and Bexhill at same frequency).

Secondhand Ford Prefect sold in Marlow, 1958 = £450.

A days hire of the "latest de luxe 4 door Morris 1000" car, with radio fitted, including RAC & AA membership and insurance, from Platts garage, 1958 = 17s 6d.

An hours driving tuition by "an expert", 1958 = 10s .

Used gray colour Ford Consul car, with 9000 miles on clock, from Greene & Earl garage, Maple Rise, 1959 = £710.

Cost of parking in High Street on Sunday or Bank Holidays, no time limit, 1964 = 2s. 

1955 Jaguar car mk 7m, offered for sale in Marlow, 1964 = £85.

Vespa - 1955 model, in good condition, sold used in Marlow 1958 = £76. In the same year a second hand Vespa with screen, pillion and cover was £100 as sold in Little Marlow.  


Compiled by Kathryn Day  and Charlotte Day.  Warm thanks to contributors! 

Other posts about general Marlow history can be found in an index here

©Marlow Ancestors. You are welcome to use this information for family or local history purposes with credit to this blog.


Sunday, December 21, 2025

Forrest Grave Marlow Cemetery

 


In loving memory of Lucy, widow of Robert Forrest of Calderhead Lanarkshire. Born December 23rd 1857 died March 21st 1924. 

ALSO OF 
Her son Robert Clive Forrest, 1st batt County of London Regiment (London Scottish). Reported missing 1st November 1914 at Messines Flanders and presumed killed in action that day. Aged 18 years. 


Additional notes: 

The Forrest family lived at New Court Marlow. Nesta, daughter of Robert and Lucy, would be the future Mrs Forbes Liston who gave so many things to the town directly or through hefty donations including New Court house* and garden, and Liston Hall. 

Mrs Lucy Forrest was in herself a generous benefactor to countless Marlow charities and institutions. Her bequests included £450 after taxes to the Marlow Cottage Hospital. 

The grave is listing/sinking. The one next to it is that of Flight Lieutenant William Wain, Nesta's first husband who was killed on service in Berlin in 1920. 

To look for information about any particular person on this blog use the A-z person index on the top drop down menu. 

*A history of New Court is available here

For other grave images see the index 

here

Index of posts about general Marlow history here




© MarlowAncestors 



Monday, December 15, 2025

Life in 1930s Marlow Part Three Childhood and Religion

 Part one dealt with employment, homes and shopping here. Part two covered sport and leisure plus transport and is available here


Childhood

By the end of the decade 170 boys were bring educated at Borlase School. Though the main building dated from the 1600s the school was keen to keep the facilities up to date, funds permitting. In 1938 a block was added containing a purpose built laboratory and dining room along with extra cloak rooms. Earlier in the decade an old dorm house was converted into a library for the boys.

Marlow infants attended the mixed infant school in Oxford Road. The older boys and girls were then educated separately from each other, girls at a school in St Peter Street (which formerly had had infants too) and the boys at Wethered Road. In 1931 there were 8 teachers at both the boys' and the girls' schools. Bovingdon Green village school still existed for infants and juniors of both sexes early in the decade. This also catered for the children of Marlow Common. Older children were given motor bus transport into Marlow to attend the schools there.

Just outside the town in Quarry Woods was Quarry Court, a boarding and day school for girls. This school started in the late 1920s and seems to have gone by 1946. It is now a domestic dwelling. Wycombe Court private girls school at Lane End for 8-18 year olds also had a mixed kindergarten for under 8s and provided coach transport for it's Marlow day pupils. 

The children of Marlow Bottom had no school of their own. Motor transport was provided for all of the village children from 1925 to 1932 but then the education authorities decided that only those with more than two and a half miles to travel each way to school would be offered transportation with the others having to walk. Their walk took them along the main road which in those days had no pavement and was a notorious accident blackspot. The road through the village of Marlow Bottom itself tended to flood whenever it rained which made things doubly difficult for the children. Older children gave piggyback rides to the little ones to get them through the resulting mud that was at times more than 6 inches deep and tended to linger for weeks at a time. Some of the Marlow Bottom pupils went on strike in protest, fully supported by their parents, all to no avail.

There was at least one nursery school catering for the 2-5 years of 1930s Marlow.

On high days and holidays little Marlovians could make use of the swings, sand pit and roundabouts in Higginson Park (there by 1933), or enjoy the recreation ground at Seymour Park Road. There were official bathing places with attendants at both Marlow and Bisham. Marlow schoolchildren practised for and gained their 20 yard swimming certificates on a marked course at the Marlow one. In 1934 children's river swimming competitions were organised at Marlow with medals up for grabs and a tea for all competitors.

The Bucks Free Press of 7th September 1934 reported that there was a barrel organ proprietor who visited the town regularly and whose real live dancing mouse delighted the Marlow children.

Marlow possessed a toy shop and plenty of sweet sellers to please the littlest of our townsfolk. Woolworth's "bazaar" in Market Square must have been a fun excursion.

The cinema, first at Spittal Square and then in Station Road, offered some child friendly features such as Mickey Mouse shorts. 

Like most towns in thirties England Marlow had both Boy Scouts (and their Wolf Vub juniors) and Girl Guides. In those days the Scouts met in a hut in Mill Road. The boys usually had a float in the Marlow Week carnival parade mentioned above. Our Marlow troupe of Girl Guides were part of a 3000 guide march past salute to Lady Baden-Powell in 1933 at their county rally. In 1934 lucky members who could afford the fee went on a five day camp to Wales where the girls played cricket on the beach, rode in motor cars, and practiced their camping skills. The following year the Guides also performed an unspecified display at the 1935 annual Church Fete in the park. Sea Scouts (Thames River) also existed in Marlow during the thirties.

The Salvation Army in Crown Road had its own youth group for girls "The Girl Guards', and there may have been an equivalent for boys too. Most of the churches had some kind of junior endeavour as well as a Sunday School.

At the C Of E Church Fetes children could enjoy pony rides thanks to the Pinches family at Pinches Farm near Newtown Road and "Dodge The Ball", "Bran Tub" (plunging your hand into a tub of bran to see if you can pull out a prize) and "Hidden Treasure" sideshows amongst others. They might not have made a beeline for the stalls selling "toilet requisites", kitchen implements or needlework but the sweet, cakes and ice lollies surely drew a crowd of little Marlovians.

Rosy cheeked little cherubs could be entered into the Baby Show (pretty much all similar events in the thirties had one of these). In 1935 the Marlow winners in the various baby categories at the Church Fete were Peter Anson, Kenneth Short, and Pamela Ball.

Every summer the Regatta brought the fair to the town and with it the lure of the steam horse carousel, coconut shy and "catchpenny" attractions it contained, not to mention the firework show afterwards. 

Dancing lessons were available from Hilda Bailey for any little Twinkle Toes in the early and mid 1930s, before she relocated her classes fully to High Wycombe.

At home, listening to radio shows were very popular. The Ovaltiney Concert programme on Radio Luxembourg, sponsored by the makers of the Ovaltine drink was a craze for better off children whose parents could afford to buy what was then seen as a premium drink and priced as such. Children who joined the League of Ovaltineys (a million in number by 1938) pledged to drink Ovaltine every single night and had their own club song. They were given coded messages on the programme, and could earn badges based on their activities.

Children engaged in less wholesome activities and who found themselves on the wrong side of the law as a result were offered anonymity and attended a special children's court at Marlow. During the thirties this moved to a room in Court Garden. Almost all of the children who came before the bench were boys.

A shadow was cast over all childhoods as Marlow began to prepare for and then fight WW2. In 1939 a large number of children arrived in Marlow as part of evacuated families or schools. This gave the Marlow children a chance to make new friends and learn new versions of favourite playground games such as skipping rhymes which the evacuees brought with them. Some of these children came from severely deprived backgrounds and were found to have untreated scabies or body lice. The mixing of evacuee and local children lead to a scabies outbreak amongst the local children which the authorities struggled to contain as the nearest isolation accommodation was already overstretched. Some children had to be sent to Beaconsfield for treatment.


Religion

A Plymouth Brethren chapel was built in Newtown Road at the start of the decade providing the first permanent base for a Christian group that had been in the town for some years. The more established churches were the Catholic Church in St Peter's Street, the C of E parish church by the river and it's sister Holy Trinity, the Wesleyan chapel in Spittal Street (which absorbed the Primitive Methodist congregation in 1933), the Congregational Church in Quoiting Square AKA "the Congie", the Salvation Army in Crown Road and the Baptist Chapel in Glade Road. Those last two both rebuilt their places of worship in the thirties.

All Saints by the river and Holy Trinity Church in Trinity Road both received electric lighting for the first time in 1934.

Canon Owen Spearing was the C of E vicar of Marlow from 1916 to 1938 when he was replaced by Revd Amies. Owen needed to move for the sake of his health to a less busy parish. He was an honorary canon of Christ Church, Oxford and the rural dean of Wycombe district as well as our vicar. His saddened congregation presented him with a cheque for £132 at a farewell event held at Court Garden. Before coming to Marlow Owen had been a missionary in Iran and a clergyman in Reading. 

Researched and written by Charlotte Day

Some sources=

Marlow Town Guide 1931/32 edition.

A Century of Childhood by  Steven Humphries, Joanna Mack, Robert Perks Published by Sidgewick and Jackson, London, 1989.

Kelly's Directory of Buckinghamshire etc 1939 edition.

Personal interview.

Bucks Herald June 3rd 1933, Buckinghamshire Advertiser 19th August 1938. British Library Archives via the BNA.

Bucks Free Press June 28th 1935, South Bucks Free Press Archives.

Historic advertising 


PHOTO ID ANYONE?

 Can anyone help a fellow family history researcher Linda identify where this staff photo may have been taken in Marlow? Underneath are some...