In the 1960’s, I was a photographer with the Kent
Messenger newspaper which maintained a district office at Sandgate,
and this had a pleasant, roomy flat over the premises, into which my
wife and I and our two young sons moved early in 1966.
We found Sandgate in the mid-1960's a lovely place to live.
Although a minor seaside resort in itself, it was, effectively, a
suburb of Folkestone, but retained a village atmosphere, with the main
street running parallel with the sea-front at the base of the steep
escarpment at the top of which was Shornecliff Army Barracks. The Kent
Messenger office was on Sandgate High Street, separated from the sea
front by a row of Edwardian boarding houses which had stood empty and
derelict since the war. But, shortly after we moved into the flat,
these were demolished, opening up extensive sea views across the 100
or so yards of rough ground which was all that now stood between our
flat and the sea wall. This was something of a drawback when there was
a south-westerly gale blowing, driving big waves against the sea wall
which they often hit with such force, making a loud "whoomff"
noise as they did so, that they shook the building and deposited a
shower of seawater and shingle onto the roof, which had to be
weatherproofed with some sort of bitumen compound to make it
waterproof, impervious to salt and robust enough to withstand the
bombardment of shingle. When an onshore wind combined with a very high
tide, the sea would come right over the sea wall and flood the High
Street and Esplanade (and the cellar of the Messenger office).
But these snags were more than compensated for by the incredibly
beautiful and ever changing seascapes to be seen from the rear windows
of the flat.
On a clear day, from the back bedroom window, it was possible to
see the coast of France 22 miles away across Dover Strait, and, at
night, the headlights of cars travelling the coast road between Calais
and Boulogne were clearly visible. With the aid of binoculars, we
indulged in a form of maritime ‘train spotting’, identifying the
names and nationalities of ships travelling this most busy of
waterways, and watching the pilot boat going out to put a pilot aboard
a ship about to negotiate the mouth of the Thames, or taking one off
on the outward journey. We saw the Channel Ferries plying back and
forth out of Dover, and the first Hovercraft ferries operating.
When one of the notorious channel fogs came rolling in, the
mournful braying of the foghorn on the Varne lightship could be
clearly heard, and, at the stroke of midnight on New Year's Eve, all
the ships, either in harbour or out on the Roads would sound their
sirens to welcome in the New Year.
We also had a grandstand seat during the filming of the ‘dogfight’
sequences for the film "The Battle of Britain", released in
1969, which starred, among others, Laurence Olivier, Michael Caine,
Ralph Richardson, and Christopher Plummer. The planes used, Spitfires,
Hurricanes and Messerschmitts, mostly belonging to the
Spanish air force and repainted with their original camouflage
markings and identification symbols for the filming, swooped and dived
just a short distance out to sea, often flying fast and low along the
shore line. There were only about three of each type of aircraft, so
some very clever camerawork and, later, film editing, was required to
create the illusion of the dozens of aircraft which would have been
involved in the real ‘dogfights’.
Being so close to the shore, we were able to spend a lot of time
down by the sea. The ‘beach’ at Sandgate consisted mainly of
pebbles, sand being visible only when the tide was well out, but it
was usually clean, and because it was on the edge of such a busy sea
lane, there were often interesting items of flotsam and jetsam to be
found along the shoreline, particularly after a storm.
In the warm weather, with home only such very short distance away,
my wife could take the boys to spend all day by the water, and, on
warm summer nights, it was possible for us to slip out of the flat
while the boys were asleep and go for a quick cooling dip in waters
alive with phosphorescence.
In spite of her heavy coat, designed for arctic conditions, our
Samoyed dog Zella loved the water and would happily retrieve anything
floating in the sea. She even pulled one of our sons out of the water
by the seat of his bathing trunks when a wave knocked him over. On one
occasion, she nearly drowned when she was swamped by a freak giant
wave while squatting by the waters edge. She always ‘did her
business’ well away from the waves after that!
One of the oddities of living in the Sandgate flat was that we were
unable to use a mains radio, the neon sign in the shop window causing
so much interference that clear reception of radio programmes was
impossible. To get round this, we bought a Marconi battery operated
set, but found, to our surprise, that we received transmissions from
Radio Francaise better than those from the BBC. This was a
considerable drawback when it came to the spoken word as neither of us
spoke or understood much French, but we enjoyed concerts and other
musical offerings. One programme we particularly remember was called
"Un Note Sur le Guitar". We were also able to receive
clear transmissions from the so-called ‘pirate’ radio stations,
particularly ‘Radio London’ which had been set up by a
couple of American businessmen to cash in on the success of ‘Radio
Caroline’. ‘Radio London’ broadcast from a converted American
minesweeper moored off the Essex coast, and first brought Kenny
Everitt to the attention of the listening public. There was also ‘Radio
390’ which broadcasted from a wartime defence fort in the
Thames Estuary.
We have lived in many towns and cities in three different
countries, but the memories of our time in Sandgate remain amongst our
happiest recollections.