DATA BASE REF: A/F 1009
JARVIS FAMILY FARMING AT HOME FARM, MARHOLM nr PETERBOROUGH Stan and Fay Jarvis live at Home Farm, having farmed there with Stan’s brothers, the late Toby Jarvis and Peter Jarvis
Their grandfather George Jarvis after the
First World War came to the village to Belsize Farm (considered to be in
Marholm, it is in fact both in Castor Ecclesiastical Parish and Castor Civil
Parish.)
George Jarvis who died in 1957, came to Belsize after the Great War.
Before that he had been a carrier based in Helpston, transporting, gravel,
wood, timber etc. Vic Winterton claims that when George Jarvis came back from
the 14-18 War, Helpston village helped him buy his first horse and cart.
George
m Edith
Jarvis
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Arthur m Faith Jack m Rose Watts George Ernie
Jarvis Jarvis Jarvis Jarvis
(Home d.1957 (these 2
brothers came out of farming 1947)
Farm) (Belsize
Farm)
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Toby Stan Peter Gordon Cyril m Jean Colin m Lily Brian Graham
m. m m (Dick) Ayres (Jagger) Dytham
Mary Fay Vi
East Wright
Notes:
Grandfather George Jarvis lived at Home Farm Marholm from 1923 once he
had taken that on in addition to Belsize Farm.
Cyril Jarvis, son of Jack(John) is always known as Dick. He married at
Marholm Church in 1954 to Jean, daughter of Sid and Liz Ayres who lived at
Pellat Hall (where Jean was born in 1931) as tenants of Milton Estate.
Toby married Mary East and they had three children: Wendy, Andrew and
Martin.
Stan was married to Fay Wright
at Werrington in 1958 by the Revd Mr Butterworth and they had a son
Robert
Peter married Violet and they had a son Stephen.
Cyril(Dick) Jarvis has a son Trevor married to Jane (children Melissa
and Isabel) and Sandra (children Gavin and Stephanie Cooper)
George Jarvis the younger, son of old George worked for the Bradleys at
Woodcroft. His daughter is Rachel Ginn of Ailsworth
Farms Associated with the
Jarvis Family :
In 1947 George Jarvis sold up to retire, but his son Arthur took on the
tenancy of Home Farm and his son Jack took on Belsize Farm. George built a
bungalow in Woodcroft Road (where Selma Roth lived latterly) and he and Ethel
lived there until they died. The bungalow is owned by Milton Estate now. Jack
died 12th December 1979
In 1962 Dick took on Belsize from his father and retired in 1996, and
his son Trevor now farms Belsize on his own. His parents Dick and Jean still
live on the farm in Belsize Cottage.
Farming at Home Farm:
Toby, Stan and Peter Jarvis took over the tenancy of Home Farm from
their father Arthur(Jim). There was always a dairy at Home Farm in Arthur’s
day, and Stan kept this on until 1998. Arthur had a milk round in Peterborough,
and they used to do their own bottling at the farm. Mechanized milking started
in the 1940s. In addition to the dairy they farmed cereals, sugar beet,
potatoes, sheep, pigs and chickens for their own use and to sell on. When in
came to picking the late potatoes and the end of September after Harvest, the children
from Marholm School would have a fortnight off, even as late as the 1950s to
help pick them. The children were paid and Arthur Jarvis always gave them a cup
of hot cocoa made with milk in a big churn. They would have grown six or seven
acres of potatoes in the Dryside Field, just opposite the cattle grid entrance
into church field – this is now farmed by Noel Darby of Manor Farm.
Grandad(George) Jarvis would go off to market every week in a pony and trap;
fortunately the pony could find its own way home as they all went to the pub
after market. At one stage they had 28 horses, but they had given them all up
by the late 1950s (Jim Coles was the last horseman) . They were used for
beet-hoeing and carting grain etc as well as ploughing.. They were kept where
the cow-shed now is. Grandad Jarvis had a big Suffolk Punch called Turpin. They
had tractors early at Home Farm, ever since Stan can remember. He remembers an
old Caterpillar Crawler tractor. They used to walk the cattle from Marholm
through Peterborough to Whittlesea Wash for the grass there. That meant herding
them along the Lincoln Road! Haymaking was in June. After harvest some people
would go gleaning from the village like old Mrs Sharpe. Sometimes chicken huts
were put in the fields after harvest to pick up the ears of corn. They used to
harvest the wheat before it was ripe, bind it and stouk it. They would leave it
stouked in the fields for about a fortnight, then cart it and stack it in the
stackyard, thatching the top of the stack to keep the wet out. It would be
threshed in the stackyard. The last thing in the year was the beet, harvested
top end of September/October to January. After ploughing it up, you would have
to knock it, and lay it in rows, and depending on the time of the year top it as
well. All in all, looking after 600 acres with no help was hard work.
Notes made by W Burke on 15 May 2003 with Stan and Fay Jarvis