Mechanical Memories Magazine

Issue: 2006-April - Issue 1

Readers' Wives
By Sharron Chattenton
Hello all,
Before I continue with this and maybe end up getting hate-mail for not over-indulging in
your passion for all things slottie, let me thank you all for the support you've shown Jerry
and this magazine. Particular thanks to Dave Lavender and that strange man from Essex,
herwise known as Charlie Booth.
Well, I guess Jerry has been collecting for getting on 15 years and in the beginning I
even joined in. After the first auction I was banned from holding the bidding number as
my shopping gene kept taking over and I was going to have that machine no matter what.
It was a lot easier to hold up a card than physically fight with another woman in a shop
over a pair of shoes neither of us particularly wanted but wouldn't let the other have.
Realisation soon dawned - no 28 day statutory rights period to return my goods and
exchange them for something else that my heart desired . Another problem seemed to be
that the auctions were on Sundays and you had to view at a ridiculous time in the
morning. How can you do that sensibly after being out until the early hours the night
before? I know dedicated slotties were probably in bed at 7.30pm the night before but it
j ust wasn't us. Remember the good old days at Saffron Walden? Where everyone that
had had a drink the night before would gather in that nice cafe and have breakfast. And
then over the pub when it opened at 12.00! I remember one auction which I didn ' t attend
a couple of years ago. Jerry kept in touch as he always does and called me before he left
for home. He was very pleased with his purchases; so pleased that at the Petrol station he
forgot he was driving a diesel van and filled it with petrol! That cost a few more pounds
to put right. What a plonker! - You see, these machines and the whole slottie world get
into your brain and you can't think about normal things. My belief is that they take you
omewhere during your first auction and brainwash you - probably the back of Charlie' s
! Anyway, Jerry ' s collection started to grow and he could often be found in a quiet
comer reading another book about machines. Jerry started selling the spares for Allwins
and mending the odd machine and he hasn't looked back.
I think what really made me start to dislike the machines was that fateful day in
Hastings. Jerry received a call to say the Pier had gone into receivership and there was
the most awful storm there. We rushed down to take machines off the pier and return
them home to safety. I may not like them very much but am aware of their value - no
baliff was getting his hands on them without a fight. Anyway, before we even got near
the pier I started to notice bits of wood in the road and over the beach. The waves were
reaching the other side of the road and the wind was petrifying (and that was just Jerry).
As we drew closer we realised the wood had come form the pier and it had two gapping
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holes, which the sea was pounding through . The pier was shaking, the rain lashing down
and it was dark in the middle of the day. It was a frighteneing experience. Dodging the
holes we started taking machines out and a friend with a hi-hab lorry came to our rescue
for the larger stuff. I did think it might be the end of the pier altogether when the lorry
drove on. I remember standing soaking wet, freezing cold and physically shaking with
exhaustion. The machines all returned home and this is where my dislike for them really
started to fester. Not straight away but they slowly ground me down . Machines were
everywhere - you literally could not move. The cat was quite happy - he even moved
into a couple of the bigger machines and loved chasing balls around in the Hi-ball. The
men in my house had turned against me - they enj oyed having the machines there. We
couldn ' t have anyone around, the machines were smelly (that horrible musty smell) and a
couple of them would inexplicably make noises at unexpected intervals. Small children
wanted to come to the house and play the machines, Jerry demanding 50p entrance on th
doorstep and frightening our elderly neighbours with crys of ' Roll up, Roll up .
Neighbours would twitch their cutains wondering what on earth Jerry was bringing home
next. They had finally taken over my life and my house.
A while later John Hayward decided to take things easy and Jerry took over
Mechanical Memories in Brighton. Great - most of the machines left home and started
earning a living. There was a catch though . Unless I went to Brighton during school
holidays and most weekends I wouldn't see my husband. I perservered for a while and
made the journey most weekends but the novelty of listening to that bloody laughing
sailor soon wore off. Does anyone out there know what I mean? I could easily take an
axe to his head. What a creepy machine! It' s not entertainment; it's a very slow form of
torture . The only laugh l ' ve had around one of those was the one Jerry has at the Hop
Farm. Someone dutifully put their money in and it started laughing - I glared over in its
direction and its trousers started slowly falling down. I didn ' t want it fixed but Jerry
couldn't be around all day just to hoist his trousers up before the next customer arrived . I
have prom ised Jerry that should he go before me, I will bury a laughing sailor with him
before selling the collection and becoming a merry widow cruising around the World.
Surely the machines can hold their value better than our endowment policy has?
There are fewer machines indoors now and Jerry thinks he's doing well keeping
them out of sight. Three years ago I compromised again and let him build a workshop -
for engineering purposes. This workshop could happily house an indoor football mato
and my poor garden has shrunk beyond all comprehension. What' s the workshop fillea
with? You guessed it, machines, more machines and various crapphernalia for machines.
(Sorry made up a word there - it happens when I get wound up).
The long and short of it is that I won 't leave Jerry or divorce him for his hobby. Not
many of us are lucky enough to be able to make a 'living from something we enjoy so
much. I guess all of you are preserving a piece of history and that's something lots us
won't do in our lives. He knows the rules now and keeps machines away from me in
case I run them over with the hoover in a temper fit. My hobbies? I'm quite happy at
home with a settled family life and my work. Would like to travel the world more but my
husband is always in Brighton, so stand-in required particulary in the summer months.
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