Having a Carry On
Our Former Pupils have lived through some significant changes, and
recall them in letters and e-mails.
Like all children, though, they liked to enjoy themselves.
"In the summer holidays those of us who lived near the school
used the playgrounds as a roller skating rink as it was smoother than
the road and nobody told us to stop being pests." (Norman Johnston, 1941-7)
"During air raid drill, as we sat in our rows in the cellar wearing gas masks,
I recall discovering that if you breathed out too forcefully,
the expelled breath escaped through the sides of the mask,
making a rude noise. The teacher wasn't having any of this but
as she too wore a mask, her orders could not be heard clearly
and she became so excited that she too added to the sounds
we all made...
"I must say I didn't like being at school and there was a
time when my brothers and I visited the clinic down in King Street,
I think, to be told that we had German Measles and had to stay
off school. It was wonderful and we ran along Hilary Crescent
then saw our mother in the front of the property. We called to her
with the good news of our affliction only to receive a scolding,
my mother declaring that she was 'black affronted', which
many mothers were in those days..." (David McRobbie, 1941 and later)
"The other thing I thought of in regards to your items
on what 'kids' get up to, was our 'dare' of trying to go
through the railway station on the way home from school.
"Those
of us who lived in the Alloway St, Kyle St, Smith St, Mill St,
etc, area that had to go over the railway bridge that runs from
Holmston Road to Burn's Statue Square had a permanent 'dare' for
anyone to try and take the 'shortcut' through the station.
"It was
'out of bounds' of course, and the trick was to get past the
stationmaster's office, which was in the passageway in the entrance
from the Holmston Road side, up the stairs, across the bridge, down
the stairs and out the other side to 'Smith St'.
"Of course the
station master had a great view of us coming, being that his office
windows looked out on the 'vast area' from Holmston Road down the
hill to the station, and knowing the time when school was out, but
that was the challenge!, and there were many who were willing to
risk it, including myself, I must say, and maybe that's why I
became the good runner that I did, because of it.
"Oh! to be young again!!!" (Susanne Nixon, now McMillan, 1948-55)
Pupils could also enjoy themselves without annoying grown-ups:
"While growing up in Ayr, I wandered wide and freely and
found it a place of endless fascination. I often visited Burns
Cottage which in those days cost 6d to enter, spent hours at the
docks looking at the Irish coal ships, borrowed books from the
Carnegie Library, skated on the River Ayr in winter and generally
enjoyed myself. I also became a Burns devotee in those days, an
interest that has not left me." (David McRobbie, 1941 and later)