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1.
A VIEW OF LOCAL PEOPLE BY PEOPLE WHO CAME TO LIVE IN HINCKLEY
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Alf Biggs (b.1923)
The
only thing was, that even now I find the locals (Hinckley) are a bit
strange...I don't know, it's difficult to explain their attitude, they've
got a most peculiar attitude. Now I'm what you might call a light hearted
person and I can see the funny side of anything...I'll just give you a
typical example. I was walking round in Gateway a couple of months ago,
and an announcement came over the tannoy...and it struck me as being funny
right from the start. 'Will Mr. Baker the butcher please go to the side
entrance there's just been a delivery of meat,' and I said, 'Oh, he's
going to get the chop,' and they looked at me and I thought, 'All right,
perhaps I may have a peculiar sense of humour,' you know, and about ten
minutes later a woman came up to me and she said, 'Hey, I've just seen
what you meant!' 'Oh,' I thought, 'oh no.'
A lot
depends on who you are and what you are. If you're the type of person who
finds it easy to communicate with other people then you'll get on anywhere
no matter where you are, but if you're the sort of person that goes with
the attitude that you're better than they are then you won't get anywhere.
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Anon
They're like that the people of Hinckley, they don't take to outsiders,
you've got to impress them if you want to become an insider as it were.
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And then they sort of take possession of you, which is fatal. You get one
family who wants to take possession of you and nobody else is entitled to
have much to do with you. That's how they are because the reason is, the
people of Hinckley are so involved with each other and
they're all
inter-married you've got to be dreadfully careful what you say to them
because they'll let you say - this in times gone by - they'll let you say...they want to know what you're talking about and then when the
conversation is finished they'll let you into the trick because they'll
say, 'That's my brother,' or 'That's my sister that you've been talking
about.' They're so inter-married. It's like it now.
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Alf Biggs
In the 33 years that I've been up here it's certainly grown, I mean,
there's all these new houses and that. I thought it was more like what you
might call a farming community. At one time of day you used to get two
rows of traffic, one up and one down, oh yeah it used to be a heck of a
job up Castle Street at one time...I mean it was no wider than a country
lane. Recently they were just the old type village shops, you know...in
fact I would almost go so far as to say that when I got here it was a hick
town - almost! Oh, yes, definitely improved.

Regent
Street in the 40s
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