MARY ELIZABETH WARNES - 1900-1973
'M.E. Warnes General Stores'
By Mark Tovey
This page was inspired by finding mention of my Nan and her shop, 'M.E. Warnes General Stores' on the Our Newhaven site, posted by Carol Walton & Andy Gilbert [search 'Mrs Warnes' Shop and the Ship Hotel']. She had the shop from the mid 1930s until around 1963.
She was born Mary Elizabeth Allen in Bethnal Green, London in 1900; then as now, an economically deprived area. In her childhood she was friendly with a certain local lad, Jack Cohen, who had a market stall in the area. He later upscaled to a few shops, which he named Tesco's. Mary's business empire was to be somewhat modest in comparison.
She moved to Sussex when she took up a job as matron of a school in the Uckfield area, sometime in the early 1920s. It was at this time she met Harold Stapley. They married at Mayfield Parish Church in July 1926 and sometime later moved to a tithe cottage at Palehouse Common, with Mary becoming the house keeper of the beautiful Arches Manor at Framfield [which still exists]. Their first daughter, Marcia [my Mother] was born in 1927 and Honor, their 2nd daughter, in 1931. By this time Harold was a postman but was to die of tuberculosis in 1933; although I don't recall mention of him when I was a boy, he must have remained important to Mary as all her life she kept a letter from their courting days, along with his wire framed glasses, and his WW1 Army and Post Office cap badges.
Around 1935, with financial support from an older brother, she purchased the shop and home at 1 High Street, Newhaven. From what I can establish, the premises was formerly the 'Newhaven Dairy & Teashop'. She later met Albert Warnes, who worked on the boats at Newhaven and was originally from County Durham. They married in 1937 and had 2 children: Edwin, born in 1940, and Lionel, in 1941.
Mary continued running the shop throughout the war years into the 1950s and early 1960s. Being centrally located, it remained a thriving business and she was at the heart of the local community and privy to most of its gossip. Some of Newhaven's best known characters were frequent visitors: Bert Lilywhite, the coal man, had a 'special' chair out the back of the shop where he perched to drink his mug of tea and where he sat to avoid spreading coal dust everywhere. As I wasn't born until after she sold the shop my memories are limited to her years in retirement. She was ever the matriarch, and could be stern and stubborn, with strong opinions. My brother and I mostly experienced her warm side, unlike Albert, her husband, who could easily arouse her wrath for a transgression of domestic protocols.
Sometime in the 1950s Mary purchased a bungalow at Links Avenue, behind Newhaven Golf Course, on the Peacehaven border, with a view to retiring there. However, this was sold to my parents in 1959 when they moved back down from a brief time living in London, following the birth of my brother.
Mary was forced to sell the shop in the early 1960s when the road network through Newhaven was reconfigured and the shop was earmarked for demolition. No longer having a business, she retired and moved briefly out to Heathfield, before buying two derelict cottages at Whitesmiths [near Ringmer] which were replaced with a bungalow where she lived out her last years.
Mary fell ill with cancer in the early months of 1973, and was nursed by my Mother. Mary died in May 1973 at Links Avenue, Newhaven. Her husband, Albert, moved briefly to Peacehaven after her death, before moving back to the North East; he died in 1976. Her first daughter, Marcia, died in 1974 but her other children, Honor, Edwin and Lionel are still living.
After Nan's death my brother and I came across an old box of stock from her shop containing several bars of Cadbury's milk chocolate. Our delight quickly dissipated after we tasted a bar and found it had rather exceeded its 'best before' date.
Back in the 1980s I made a trip to Newhaven and visited the Museum when it was located adjacent to the car park on the sea front. I chatted with a chap there [whom I'm guessing was likely Peter Bailey] who remembered Mrs Warnes well and showed me the photo of her outside her shop from the museum archive [the same photo as featured below]. It was only a brief conversation and I was not inclined to follow it up and make contact with people who knew Nan. Now I'm older and of a mind for such an undertaking, those people have sadly long since passed away...
Thanks to Honor Roberts & Edwin Warnes for filling in some details.
Mrs Warnes outside 'M.E. Warnes General Stores', 1 High Street. Telephone: Newhaven 299. Early 1950s
Mary "Dollie" Elizabeth Allen, Hackney, London, September 1924
Mary Stapley with her daughters, Honor & Marcia, Palehouse Common, circa 1933
Mary with her first husband, Harold Stapley, Uckfield, late 1920s
Outside the shop at 1 High Street, Newhaven, circa 1937. L-R: unknown man, Mary Stapley [later Warnes], daughters Marcia & Honor, unknown woman. The iron railings were removed during WWII and never replaced
Mary Warnes & 2nd husband, Albert Warnes, October 1950
3 of Mary's 4 children: Edwin Warnes, Marcia Stapley & Lionel Warnes, taken 23 December 1952
Denton Island Bridge, circa 1948: some headless & unidentified folks but includes: Marcia Stapley & Mary Warnes [left, rear], Edwin Warnes [kneeling & scowling, front], Barry Wilkinson [wearing white shirt & tie] with his Nan & Mum, Lionel Warnes [in front of Barry]. If anyone can identify any others, please let me know
Shandy, Mrs Warnes' first Irish Setter. Portrait taken by Raymond Austen, Seaford, 1950s
Rear view of Mrs Warnes home & shop [centre, rear] with Denton Island bridge to left. Taken circa 1960
Mary Warnes in retirement, with her beloved roses, Whitesmiths [near Ringmer] summer 1972