Woman marvels at her home town's success as she marks 100th birthday
Edith May Curtis, need Harnett, celebrated her milestone day with friends and family at Haven Court in Seaham’s East Shore Village.
Born in the middle of the First World War to housewife Adelaide and her husband William Henry, who went on to become the berthing master of her home town’s port, she left school and began working at Balies Pork Shop in Princess Road.
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Hide AdShe soon moved on to work at the newly opened Woolworths store in Church Street in 1936.
The next year she married Ernest Edward Curtis, who was known as Ted, and before the Second World War had ended they had four children, Audrey, who has since died, William, Raymond and Nancy, with Edward born in 1953.
Ernest worked as a miner at the Vane Tempest colliery during the war.
Edward said: “I sometimes take my mother to the port at Seaham Harbour for a coffee at the recently developed marina which now occupies the once busy coal port where my grandfather worked and we look out to sea remembering the days when my father worked deep beneath it.
“It has always fascinated both me and my mother.
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Hide Ad“So much has changed in the places near to where she lived and grew up; the ropery works and the bottleworks, once hugely important employers, closed so many years ago and the only trace of the miners’ legacy is a little coal dust that washes in from the sea on the south beach.”
Edith had watched on as the town had become a tourist destination in recent years with a busy cafe culture.
Edward added: “My mother has lived in many places over the years in Seaham and now lives, quite comfortably and somewhat ironically I think, at Harbour Lodge in East Shore Village.