Mortimer Cricket Club - 1959
From Reading Mercury Saturday 16 May 1959
MORTIMER'S NEW CRICKET PAVILION A few years ago the Mortimer Cricket Club
was £4O in the red — today it is solvent and has a brand new pavilion into the
bargain. On Saturday the new pavilion was opened by Mr. L. J. Strang, chairman of
the Mortimer Parish Council.
For many years the club had to make do with a small hut for a pavilion then a
Reading man mentioned that at a Tilehurst Army camp there was a quard room
dismantled and for sale. Inquiries were made and the price asked was £125, a
bargain indeed, but out of the question to a club whose finances were at low ebb.
But various money-raising schemes were run, and at last the purchase was made.
As soon as funds permitted, foundations were laid by the enthusiasts, few of them
craftsmen, but all ready to have a go under the watchful eye of their “foreman,” Fred
Dunk. The landlord of the local hostelry donated a refrigerator, a farmer’s wife gave a
cheque to buy a first-class table tennis table, and many others gave their time and
efforts. Last week, over three years after the scheme was first devised, the job was
completed ready for the first game of the season on Saturday versus the local
farmers. At the opening ceremony Mr. Strang called the pavilion “A landmark in the
history of the club, remarkable because it has been created by your own efforts, your
own skill and your own hands.”
It was something of a gala day all round. The club beat the farmers, and in the
evening invited them to a dinner-dance to thank them for previous hospitality, and
also to show appreciation to the ladies who for years have made the teas at
matches.