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Copyright 2002 - 2023 ©Barry Carter. All rights reserved
THE GAMES We played in the streets
Lolly Sticks
This was a game to be played while sitting
over the coal hole, in the porch of your house,
on a rainy day. A steady hand is needed. You
sat there with your bunch of flat wooden ice
lolly sticks (there were always loads of these
available) and let them fall from a low height
so that they landed in a crisscross heap. You
then picked up all the ones that weren't
touching from round the edges. You then
used one of these to start flicking a stick off
the pile without disturbing any others. If you
moved another one while flicking it was your
opponent’s turn.
Run Outs
Whoever was picked to be ‘it’, faced the
wall and counted to twenty, while the others
ran and hid. He then went in search of them.
When one of the hiders was caught by him
they joined him as a seeker to find the others.
As more kids were found the search team got
bigger. This went on until there was only one
hider left and so became the winner.
Sometimes the others had to find him or her
to convince them that they were actually the
only one not yet found! They would ignore
calls in case it was skulduggery by the
seekers.
He Ball
This was the same as the classic game
called either "it", "had", “tag” or "he", where
you chased the others in order to touch them
and make them "it" instead of you. The only
difference being that a ball was used to throw
at them instead of touching by hand. When it
hit them it was their turn to chase the others
with the ball. Sometimes immunity was given
if you were off the ground.
Kiss Chase
This was one of my favourites! There was
the girls team and the boys team. Either the
boy chose a girl to chase, or the girl chose a
boy. The reward (or penalty, depending on
who chased you) was for the two to kiss on
the lips. Wonderful if you had a looker
chasing you. Not so good if it was a snotty
nosed ugly one with bad breath!
Gobs
Sometimes
called
Fivestones or
Jacks. Most of us
kids would have
had a set of Gobs.
You could pick
them up cheaply in newsagents or toy stores.
Five small cubes of stone. You tossed them in
the air and caught at least one on the back of
your hand. You tossed from the back and
caught in the palm. Then you tossed one and
picked up one from the ground and caught
the one you tossed in the same hand. You
then did the same, picking up two, then three
then four.
Cheap and Cheerful
When we weren’t playing cowboys on the
debris, or any of the above games, there were
always the cheap toys we spent our pocket
money on. Mainly rubbish, but it kept us
amused. Off to Wheatley’s the newsagents to
buy the comics (Beano and Dandy usually)
and while there, something in the window
always caught your eye.
A ‘Rocket’ and a roll of caps! The rocket
consisted of a bomb-shaped piece of metal,
sliced through to give two separate parts. The
parts were held together by an elastic band in
a groove. You put a cap between the two
metal surfaces, the band holding them in
place, and you threw it into the air. Yes that
was it! Exciting eh? It came down, the cap
went bang, and you did it again. This was
entertainment. We would spend hours playing
with a toy that cost pennies! We stopped
when we finally got bored or nobody had any
caps left. Years later, I remember seeing the
improved version. Made from moulded plastic
with a spring loaded button to hold the caps.
Not a patch on the original but a lot less
painful if it landed on you!
We played cowboys and Indians, Soldiers,
spacemen. Some had plastic guns while
others had bits of wood, it didn’t matter. We
built camps from old planks of wood and
cardboard. We got dirty, cut, grazed and
bumped, but we enjoyed every minute of it!
Bonfire night >>
No Traffic
The streets were
much safer back
then. The main
roads were always
busy with trolley
buses and
delivery vehicles,
including horse and carts. Because hardly
anyone in the area owned a car in those days
the side streets were virtually traffic free. You
can see how quiet my road was from some of
the old photos on the site. This made them a
good place to play. It also got you out of the
house while the Flit and feather dusters were
being bandied about. A car, or more likely a
lorry, may interrupt your game every half hour
or so but there was no speeding and drivers
knew there would be kids in the road.
Because everyone knew everybody else it
took the strain off the mothers who would
always know where you were. If you did
decide to wander off you would shout up to
her or tell one of the other kids to tell her.
Who’s Game Is It?
We played the usual games like football and
cricket. Coats for goal posts or a wicket
chalked on a wall would do.
One of these rules concerned who’s game it
was. Obviously when playing a ball game the
owner of the ball had the final word. “Can I
play?”, the latecomer would ask. “Better ask
Billy, it’s his ball”, would be the reply. Rules
had to be adhered to or Billy simply took his
ball home and ended the game. With other
games it was normally the person who
suggested it that the game "belonged to". “It’s
my game, and you’re not playing” would often
be said when two kids fell out.
I don't really know if any of the games below
are still in existence. I know the one in the
picture above is, Hop Scotch. You just don't
see kids playing in the street anymore. Maybe
in other parts of the country they are still alive,
it would be a shame for them to die out
altogether, but electronics have taken over.
My grandchildren sometimes sang songs and
chants that resemble the ones from the
playground of my youth but I don't think the
games haves survived so well in this
computer and smart phone age. Some street
games were known by different names in
different areas but all had basically the same
rules.
Games described here may seem
complicated at first but all are quite simple to
pick up. Picking teams or someone to be "it"
was usually done by "dipping" or "pigeon
steps". If nobody else was playing out we
played alone, with the dirt.
Who’s going to be “It”?
"Dipping" was the fairest way to decide this,
and there were many different rhymes to
accompany this elimination process. The
"dipper" would recite the rhyme while
touching or pointing at each person on each
word in turn. The one left at the end would be
"it" for the first game. Here are a few of the
ones I remember but there were many more.
“Ip dip dog shit, you are not it”
This was one of the most popular as well as
the shortest. I think it was just an excuse to
use a swear word!
Here’s a more complicated one:
Ippa dippa dation, my operation
How many people, at the station
(Then this person picks a number, I’ll use 5 as
an example)
The one who comes to number 5 shall surely
not be it - 1-2-3-4-5.
One potato, two potato, three potato, four
(pause) Five potato, six potato, seven potato
more.
With the above, each kid held out two fists in
front of them and if the "more" came on theirs
it was put behind their back. When both
hands were behind, they were out.
There must have been scores of different
ones handed down through generations.
Tin Tan Tommy
You needed an empty tin can to play this
game. There were plenty lying about on the
debris. After sorting out where "home" was,
one of the players threw the can as hard as
they could down the street. Whoever was "it"
or "on it" chased after the can, picked it up
and ran backwards to the elected “home”
point. This was usually a section of wall; a
bollard or a lamp post.
While the tin can was being retrieved the
other kids ran and hid themselves. The
person with the can had to search out the
others and when one was spied, get back to
the can. He would then bash it up and down
on the wall, shouting “I see Johnny behind the
green lorry”, and out would come Johnny from
behind the lorry moaning because he was
now "it". If someone managed to get to the
can and bash it before the searcher did, they
were "safe".
Egga (or Egger)
This game required a tennis ball. As usual
the one to be "it" was picked by ‘dipping’. The
person who was 'it' gave the rest of the group
a subject to choose a name from. The group
then huddled together and chose names from
the given subject. If the choice was colours
then one would pick blue, another red, and so
on. One person would then recite all the
chosen colours to the one who was ‘it’. They
then threw the ball high into the air against
the wall shouting one of the colours. Whoever
had chosen that colour had to retrieve the ball
while the others ran away. As soon as they
caught it they shouted “Egga”, and everyone
had to stand still. The person with the ball
was then allowed three giant steps towards
any one of the others, and threw the ball to hit
them, making them "it" and the whole cycle
started again.
Tibby
You could find the necessary tools for this
game on one of the debris, or get your dad to
knock you up a quick set. All you needed
were two bits of wood. A small piece with
chamfers or slopes on each end, and a larger
piece to use as a bat. You placed the small
piece on the edge of the kerb or low wall with
an inch or so overhanging. You then gave it a
downward whack with the bat and sent it
flying as far as you could. From where it
landed you had to hit it on the chamfer to
make it jump into the air then try to whack it
again while it was in midair to send it flying
farther. After three whacks the distance was
paced out and the furthest person was the
winner. I have
included my
“highly
technical”
drawing
showing how
it worked!
Marbles
Every kid had
some marbles
(people tell me
I'm losing mine). I
don’t know why,
they just did. I
know that there
are many
variations of this game still played today but
ours was just a simple hit and take version.
The first person rolled their marble then the
second rolled theirs after it to try and hit it.
Alternate turns were taken by each player
until one hit the others. That marble then
became their property. This could sometimes
take ages and it has been known to go right
around the block once they had rolled into the
gutter. The other version we played was
against the wall. This was similar to ‘flickers’
(described elsewhere). I've also seen it
played in a chalked circle with different rules.
Flickers
Picture cards, or flickers, came from
cigarette packets, bubble gum and sweets.
Even packets of Brooke Bond PG Tips tea
contained picture cards. We used to play to
get more (or lose the lot). As with marbles,
there were several versions that we used to
play. The most popular was ‘up the wall’. You
flicked your card towards a wall to get as
close as possible to it. The nearest took the
cards. Or, if you landed on top of your
opponents card you took it. There were many
more variations of this game.