Brenda Margaret Lyons, known as Peggy, is the wife of my maternal great uncle, Simon Bernard Levin. Levin family HERE. Lyons family tree HERE
Tombstones for Abraham and Augusta Lyons, both buried in Townhill Cemetery, Swansea, Wales
Born: 24 August 1909 in Swansea, Wales
Born: 24 August 1909 in Swansea, Wales
Birth certificate for Brenda Margaret Lyons. She was born on 24 August 1909 at 52 Walter Road, Swansea, Wales. Her father is Abraham Lyons and her mother is Augusta Lyons (Nee Wilks). The birth was registered on 1st September 1909
Hebrew translation: Here is buried Brenda Margaret Levin, died 17 Sivan (with a typo - spelt Tivan) 5759 to the sorrow of her daughter and family. May her soul be bound up in the bond of (eternal) life. Her name is simply transliterated from English - Brenda in Yiddish and Margaret in Hebrew!
Letter from Peggy to my father dated 24 September 1956
Letter from Peggy to my grandparents dated 29 March 1959
Gertie Freedman, Peggy and Gillian at my parents wedding in Liverpool in April 1956
Peggie Levin in Liverpool, England
In the 1911 and 1921 census returns Peggy and her family are living at 52 Walter Road, Swansea, Wales
The black and white tiled bathroom was small and chilly with an enormous bath that took up half the space.
Occupation: Chemist. Peggy owned and ran a Pharmacy in Lark Lane but gave it up when her daughter was born
Married: Simon Bernard (Bertie) on 18 August 1937 in Liverpool England. Bertie was 31 years old and Peggy was 27 years old. When she was about 19, she moved from Swansea to 8 York Avenue, Liverpool to live with her brother Lewis who together with her brother Claude had set up an electronic business in Hertfordshire. Bertie's family moved into at 3 Yorke Avenue a couple of years later and so they inevitably met
Marriage certificate for Simon Bernard Levin and Brenda Margaret Lyons, 18 August 1937. They were married in the Princes Road Synagogue. Their parents are Jacob Levin, a wholesale draper and Abraham Lyons, a gentleman, both deceased
Abstract of the Ketubah (Jewish marriage contract) for Simon Bernard Levin and Brenda Margaret Lyons
Children
Their first child, Tessa, was stillborn in 1939 when Bertie was 33 and Peggy 30. Peggy was then told by her doctor to wait several years before trying to have another child. Gillian was born in 1944 when Bertie was 38 and Peggy 35
- Gillian Tessa Levin 1944 -
Printed postcard with caption: "Mrs Peggy Levin & daughter (aged ten months) Gillian Tessa of Liverpool, 1945". Peggy is wearing her white pharmacist jacket
Census details
1911
Peggy and her family are at "Milverton", 52 Walter Road, Swansea, Wales. Her father Abraham is 49, a pawnbroker and jeweler and has his own shop. Her mother Augusta is 37 and is an antique dealer also with her own shop. The children are Gladys Ella age 18, Lewis Marcus age 16, Claude Lipman age 15, Dorothy Winifred age 13, and Brenda Margaret age 1 year old. They have two servants, Elizabeth McIndoor, a widow age 41 who is the cook and Elizabeth Lewis age 21 who is the housemaid. The house has 12 rooms
Peggy and her family are at "Milverton", 52 Walter Road, Swansea, Wales. Her father Abraham is 49, a pawnbroker and jeweler and has his own shop. Her mother Augusta is 37 and is an antique dealer also with her own shop. The children are Gladys Ella age 18, Lewis Marcus age 16, Claude Lipman age 15, Dorothy Winifred age 13, and Brenda Margaret age 1 year old. They have two servants, Elizabeth McIndoor, a widow age 41 who is the cook and Elizabeth Lewis age 21 who is the housemaid. The house has 12 rooms
1921
The family is still at "Milverton", 52 Walter Road, Swansea, Wales. Her father Abraham is 59, still a pawnbroker and jeweler and has his own shop. Her mother Augusta is 46 and a housewife. Peggy, age 11 years and 9 months, is the only child still living there. The domestic servant is Hilda Bowens, age 22
The family is still at "Milverton", 52 Walter Road, Swansea, Wales. Her father Abraham is 59, still a pawnbroker and jeweler and has his own shop. Her mother Augusta is 46 and a housewife. Peggy, age 11 years and 9 months, is the only child still living there. The domestic servant is Hilda Bowens, age 22
1939 Register
In the 1939 register Bertie is living at 195 Woolton Road, Liverpool, England with his wife Peggy, sister Gertie and their maid Morfudd Davies. Bertie is a solicitor and Peggy is a dispensing chemist
Electoral registers extracts
In 1935 Peggy is listed, along with her sister Gladys, brother Lewis and his wife Tillie, as living at 8 Yorke Avenue, Liverpool, England
Death
1 June 1999 Stapeley Nursing Home, North Mossley Hill, Liverpool, England at 89 years of age following a stroke. Buried in the Broadgreen Cemetery, Liverpool, England, plot no R 038.02
1 June 1999 Stapeley Nursing Home, North Mossley Hill, Liverpool, England at 89 years of age following a stroke. Buried in the Broadgreen Cemetery, Liverpool, England, plot no R 038.02
Liverpool Jewish Burial Record for Peggy Levin
Tombstone inscription: Brenda Margaret Levin died 1 June 19999, Aged 89. Fondly remembered by Jill and family
Hebrew translation: Here is buried Brenda Margaret Levin, died 17 Sivan (with a typo - spelt Tivan) 5759 to the sorrow of her daughter and family. May her soul be bound up in the bond of (eternal) life. Her name is simply transliterated from English - Brenda in Yiddish and Margaret in Hebrew!
Probate
Brenda Margaret Lyons Probate dated 20 January 2000. She lived at 195 Woolton Road, Liverpool, England. The value of her estate was £319,018
Telegram and Letters
Telegram from Bertie and Peggy to my parents in August 1955 congratulating them on becoming engaged
Photographs
Peggy, Bertie and Gillian at my parents wedding in Liverpool in April 1956
Peggy, Bertie (both at far right) and their daughter Gillian at my parents wedding in Liverpool in April 1956. My grandmother, Zella Levin (Nee Greenberg) is 2nd from left
Gertie Freedman, Peggy and Gillian at my parents wedding in Liverpool in April 1956
A family photo taken in Southport around 1957. Left to right: Berthold Greenhill, Harry Freedman, Marcus and Zella Levin, Bertie Levin (with tie), Gertie Freedman, Hilda Greenhill, Gillian Levin, Peggy Levin
Taken 3 August 1958. My mom's family. My grandmother Zella Levin (Nee Greenberg) 4th from right and her husband Mark Levin next to her. On the far right is my grandfather's sister Gertie Freedman (Nee Levin) and her husband Harry who fought in Burma in WW2. On the left of my grandmother is Peggy (Brenda Margaret Nee Lyons) Levin and her husband Bertie (Simon Bernard) who was my grandfather's brother. Between them is Gillian Levin, their daughter. On the far left is my grandmother's brother, Bertold Greenhill (Bertie) and his wife Hilda (Nee Lerner)
Gladys Lyons (at left) and Peggy Levin (at right) in Liverpool, England in October 1963
Bertie and Peggy Levin at Hereford with their dog Pluto
Bertie and Peggy Levin at Monte Gordo, Portugal in July 1967
Bertie and Peggy Levin at Monte Gordo, Portugal in July 1967
Peggie and Bertie Levin and a friend (at right) in Rhodes, Greece in May 1966
Peggie Levin in Liverpool, England
Residences
In the 1911 and 1921 census returns Peggy and her family are living at 52 Walter Road, Swansea, Wales
Reminiscences
Lightly edited reflections on growing up at 195 Woolton Street by their daughter Gillian
"195 Woolton Road, Childwall, Liverpool 15
The house where I grew up was in the leafy suburb of Childwall. Woolton Road extended from affluent Childwall, crossing Queens Drive, through Gatacre and ending in historic Woolton Village.
Our white pebbledash conventional house was a semi, built in the mid 30s and when my parents married in 1937, they moved in forever and a day.
The top of the welcoming front door, with a mezuzah to the right hand side at the top, had embedded bowed stained glass so typical of 30s architecture.
There was a path leading up to the entrance with a scrolled low black metal gate. A narrow flower bed to the right and a small front garden to the left with a magnificent prunus tree that annually flowered, producing fragrant pink blossoms. My green fingered mother loved gardening and indulged in the front and the back garden so we did not need a gardener.
The front room to the left of the entrance had a bay window and was chilly, only used for traditional Friday night dinners and special gatherings when the usual suspects would gather for Christmas lunch or a birthday celebration. My mother would thus creep in on a mid Friday afternoon to switch on the dark chrome 1930s electric fire to warm up the room for dinner at 7.00 after the Matthew Bolton silver Georgian candlesticks were lit and the brochas (blessings) chanted.
Friday night dinners rarely varied. Half a Jaffa grapefruit, browned under the grill with demera sugar and segmented with a special serrated spoon, then delicious golden roast chicken, crunchy roasties that only my mother could make in lard, homemade traditional bread sauce and fresh garden peas that I would shell with Alma on the terrace. Alma Peters, our maid and lifelong servant of the Lyons family from Swansea, had faithfully followed her adored Peggy, my mother, to Liverpool after years of service in the large family Victorian house in Uplands, Swansea.
In fact my parents were quite anti-social only inviting the immediate small family and a couple of close friends. Everyone was Jewish from the tight knit community where my father was the Secretary of the Gothic Grade 1 Princes Road synagogue in what was nicknamed 'The Jungle' after the West Indian community had moved into Liverpool 8 in the 50s and 60s in search of a better quality of life.
I realised later, when I became the 'outsider', that no one who wasn't Jewish, with the exception of Alma and her second husband Willy who came to wash the dishes and empty the rubbish, ever came to the house. Well there was always Doris, the cleaner who managed to break antique ceramics that my mother had to glue back after they had lost their value. An example was the once valuable large Victorian green china Lalique smiling cat that stood in the fireplace in the front room, which I eventually inherited, pieced back together with love!
The small coterie of visitors included Ruth and Sonny David from South Africa in political exile, miserable, doleful Uncle Abe, a retired doctor from Leeds, Miriam and Harold Dover, a furniture wholesaler who supplied all the Ercol G Plan furniture in the house at a special price, bien sur, Uncle Mark and Auntie Zella, my father's Masonic older brother from Southport and to complete the family picture, Rubinesque Auntie Gertie and her adored silent husband thin Uncle Harry minus a third finger he lost in Burma, my mother's elder sister Auntie Gladys, my maiden aunt whose fiancé was killed in WW1 and materialistic stout controlling Auntie Tillie, the widow of my Uncle Lewis, the elder brother of the Lyons family. My third cousin Vivian Morris, back from South Africa minus a prospective husband, often came round in my teens. Despite our 5 year difference in age, we socialised on the 'Liverpool Scene'
Outside one could hear the birds twittering, mainly sparrows and blackbirds and I would listen to their birdsong in the morning as my mauve bedroom was in the front of the house, above the hall with its red and beige swirling thick pile upon which languished a solitary Victorian mahogany hall chair that no one sat on. The scrolled black metal mirror reflected the front door adding light in the dark hall while a ship's bell hung next to the mirror silently rarely tolling. On the hall table below the mirror, lay my mother's heavy Victorian brass pestle and mortar. So heavy, you could club an intruder to death with it. My mother Peggy was a chemist with her own shop in Lark Lane, unusual for a woman in the 1940s.
Next to the front room was the small diner, the hub of the house that we called the kitchen, where all the meals were served with the exception of Friday nights, Xmas and Boxing Day. We ate off a bright yellow Formica table so typical of the 1950s era. There was a G plan Ercol desk which housed the Philips record turntable and the beige dial phone by the fireplace.
Every Sunday my mother would listen to either Emil Giles or Vladimir Ashkenazi playing the Rachmaninov piano concertos while waiting for my father to arrive home from the Woolton Golf club where he was the captain. You could set your watch by the time. At 1.00 pm on the dot my father would arrive salivating in his large blue Ford Zephyr 6 for the mouthwatering Sunday roast. Next to the desk was a 1930s tiled fireplace with a mantelpiece housing a large 1930s wooden clock. In the old days the hearth was alight with coal but later on with coke after the fuel act changed. A sign of the times. In the earlier days I recall a pulley laden with the laundry as of course there was no washing machine or dryer. The tiny kitchen was congested with no room to swing our dog as we had no cat.
The black, tan and white beagle I grew up with had long floppy ears and was called Samson. I adored him. Years later he was replaced by Ross who finally had to be put down when he became aggressive and then finally an Ormskirk heeler called Pluto. I loved dogs and learned to imitate their bleating sound.
The back kitchen led onto the terrace overlooking the rockery and garden. It was a tiny room with a window looking out to the garage. It housed the stove, overhead cupboards with hoards of tinned cans left over from days of World War 2 rationing, a sky blue Formica work surface, sink and later on a washing machine although I remember a wash board as a child. I also recall fresh milk delivered by horse and cart too and used to give the horse, wearing blinkers, cubes of sugar!
The back lounge was the main room we lived in. The heavy damask swirly red and beige curtains matched the thick pile carpet out in the hall and front room. My father had a lime green upholstered Parker Knoll rocking chair and would fall asleep while watching the telly after a hard day's work at his legal office in Renshawe Street. A large mahogany Victorian inherited breakfront overlooking a lime green, typical 50s sofa, with orange cushions. Oy vey, the bright fashionable colours of that era!
Upstairs, next to my film star mauve bedroom where I played Elvis 78s, was the chilly front bedroom with a late 1930s walnut double bed, matching wardrobe and dressing table with low side cupboards left and right of the bed. This was the master bedroom but I never recall my parents sleeping in it, only comfortably off South African relatives. Peggy and Bertie had moved to the smaller twin bedded back bedroom with another similar walnut wardrobe, housing my father's Commonwealth stamp collection and a hidden copy, printed in Cairo, of the banned book 'Lady Chatterley's lover!' I recall seeing my father asleep snoring on his back with a red Roberts radio on his chest, wearing headphones. Beside him on the bedside walnut table, green and black crime paperbacks by Erle Stanley Gardner. My father's hero was the detective Perry Mason at a time when Raymond Burr played the character on TV.
Then there was the 'sewing room', a tiny spare bedroom where my mother had the inevitable Singer sewing machine. She made all my clothes and smocking in that room overlooking the terrace. Spoilt little demanding Gillian would get irritable endlessly standing while her perfectionist mother measured her up or altered the hang of a new pastel coloured dress.
We had a dark green metal bench at the bottom of the garden near the sandpit where I played with the local boys David and Peter. There was a triangular rose patch and borders of bedding plants on either side of the well tendered lawn. My mother prided herself as an amateur gardener. She only asked my father once to do some weeding. He pulled up her new plants instead!
I left the house at the age of 19, when my friend Estelle Irving said it was about time I left home because she needed a fourth girl to share the decrepit student house with her and 2 psychology students from Leeds in Withington, Manchester.
Written in Catherine Smith's NewWriting South Creative a writing workshop September 2018