Remembering Miss Muriel M Hurr Simon Loftus writes: "Miss Hurr was wonderfully patient and kind (in a quiet, rather timid way) when I went to her shop as a boy - to buy string, a kite or a penknife. She would sort through all the knives under the glass lid of her counter to find the one that I best liked the look of, and then search again to find another that seemed identical but bore a lower price tag - since she never upped the price of old stock. Sometimes the item that I wanted would be stored out of reach on a high shelf or hanging from a nail, and then she would reach for a long stick with a hook on the end, to fetch it down. It was a magical place for me. I loved the smell of rope and leather, the amazing clutter of unexpected and often unidentifiable things, the enamelled advertisment for Elliman's Embrocation, and Miss Hurr herself. Belinda Grant remembers: "She stocked everything and her shop was very narrow with a very high counter and a high ceiling. There were shelves all the way up and she would get things down with great hooks on poles. I found Miss Hurr quite frightening." (Belinda Grant remembering her childhood in Southwold in an interview for the Southwold Organ, May 2006.) |