Authors: Ned Boulting
âWhat is it you want to know?' he asked.
âWhatever you want to tell me.'
He grew up in post-war Borsall Heath in Birmingham. His memory suggested it was actually Spark Brook (itself hardly more prosperous), but Graham claims that his mother never liked to say that they were from Borsall Heath, deeming it to be a notch lower still.
He describes it as a slum. It was just that.
The area, composed of back-to-back Victorian terraces, like Leamington Road where he grew up, had suffered badly during the war. His playground was the broken landscape of streets surrounding his house. Bomb craters. Acres of bricks that once were houses. Roofs, blown to pieces and leaning out their shattered joists at unnatural angles.
Graham shared a house with his mother Lilly and with four older siblings, two boys and two girls.
Lilly's husband, Edwin Webb, had been called up to fight in General Montgomery's Tank Regiment. At the advanced age of thirty-eight he died in the opening exchanges of the Battle of El Alamein. âBecause the British tanks were rubbish compared to the German ones', as Graham puts it in his deadpan Brummie. âThe Germans had ammunition which could pierce the armour, and he was blown up in his tank.'
News of his death reached home. âThey found postcards addressed to mother in his pocket. They were covered in blood, and they just sent them off to her. That was how she found out that he'd died. Postcards from Egypt, covered in blood.'
That was in 1942. Graham was born in 1944.
Graham doesn't know whether he's been told this, or has imagined it, but he tells me that Edwin Webb had put plans in place should he be killed. âI think he knew he wouldn't come back. And he asked his brother (Dennis) to look after his wife and his kids if anything should happen to him.'
There is a pause. âThat was how I was conceived.'
Uncle Dennis didn't hang around long though, before he disappeared from their lives, too. By VE Day, he was gone, leaving behind a boy who had no idea (despite the arithmetic of dates) who his father was. In fact, for the next thirty-five years he believed that Edwin had been his father.
âI didn't know, until my mother died in 1977, that Dennis was my dad. On her deathbed she gave my sister a picture of Uncle Dennis, and said, “Tell Graham it's his dad.”'
Graham has only one memory to treasure of the man who he never knew was his real father. One afternoon, when he was âvery, very little', he was playing in the backyard, when he heard the shout of the rag-and-bone men walking down the back alley.
âI remember that one of them looked too well dressed, he was too well turned out. He came to the back fence, and he called my name out, “Graham!” He'd come to say goodbye. That's all I remember of him.'
âWere you very close to your mother?' I ask.
âNot really. No.' He thinks about it for a moment. âI can't say we were close. She never talked to me. She never said anything. Sometimes she would be crying all the time, and I'd ask her what the matter was. She'd never answer.'
Like many women of her generation, she had reason enough; not only had she lost her husband, she had also lost her father in the First World War when she was just six. In fact, her dad had died in a German prisoner-of-war camp a month after Armistice Day. All this, Graham only knows because of research he has undertaken since her death. Nothing of the sort was ever discussed during her lifetime.
All throughout his quietly fraught childhood, a pervasive silence characterised his everyday life. His mother, a machine operator at the BSA Motorworks plant, worked every shift she could to put bread on the table for her growing family of five, but showed no inclination to indulge the demons of the past. Ignorance was this family's default position, although the difference between Graham and his older siblings, and their subsequent behaviour towards him (he is only just dealing with very damaging, long-suppressed memories), suggest that they knew all too well that the ârunt of the litter' was only a half-brother.
âThat's why I like living here, you know. When I am in England, the memories come back.' The geographical distance works. âIt depresses me when I am in England. As soon as I get back to Belgium, everything just clears up, really.'
The family occupied what was known as a âback house', which gave onto the back alley, rather than the road. Smaller and cheaper, it had only two bedrooms. Graham would sleep in the same bed as his mother, and the rest somehow made do in the other room.
Serious illness was a fact of life. In his first three years, he spent prolonged periods in hospital with repeated bouts of pneumonia and a near-fatal episode of meningitis. âThey had to pump penicillin into my spinal cord between each vertebra. I think I've had to fight since day one just to stay alive.'
Sometimes, Graham describes himself as autistic. I do not think that this has ever been actually diagnosed, but it is telling that he has hit upon this word as he looks to make sense of his past. Certainly, by the time he reached boyhood, he had completely turned in on himself. And that's when he first stepped on a bike.
âI was eight years old. One of the kids on the street had a bike. I'd never been on one before, but they pushed me off, and I just rode away, you know.'
That was it. He saved, and ended up buying a rusty old wreck of a bike, stuck in the hardest of its three gears, for nine pence from his cousin. He never looked back.
âIt was my magic carpet.' The first ride he ever did was the ten miles there and ten miles back to Earlswood lakes, just outside Solihull.
He immediately got a reputation among the kids he rode with for going further and faster than any of them had attempted. They would complain that they couldn't keep up.
âThat was the story of my life: nobody would go with me.'
When he turned ten, he, along with all the other kids at school who rode bikes, hatched a plan. They would ride a hundred miles. By looking at a map, they realised that Gloucester was exactly fifty miles away: there and back then, all along the same road.
But no one went with him. âCome Sunday morning, I turned up. But no one else did. So I set off for Gloucester on my own.' He got the shock of his life when he hit the Malvern Hills, which had not been marked on the map. Over the top of the hills, he got âterrible abdominal pains', which ended in a bout of very bloody diarrhoea â but still he soldiered on. âI'd have rather died, than walk.'
He reached Gloucester, where he found a big roundabout in the middle of town, went round it, and started to head back.
Listening to him recount the adventure, I am astonished to learn that he had not packed a thing to eat or drink. âNot even a sandwich Graham?'
âI never took anything to eat. There never was anything to eat. Five kids and no money? When we got up in the morning, the cupboards were bare, you know. Some days we never had anything to eat at all. That was no issue.'
About twenty miles from home he collapsed, and lay by the side of the road. Occasionally, people would come over to him and offer help. âLeave me alone!' was all they got for their concern.
After four hours, he remounted his bike, and finally made it home. The next Sunday he went out and did it again.
I look at the retired rider sitting opposite me as he nears his seventieth birthday, and try to imagine the ten-year-old boy pushing himself into ruin. I wonder if I am to believe it all. The tales of post-war poverty are so familiar-sounding, so conforming to the archetypes of the era, that they are almost too perfect.
Yet, this is no self-dramatist.
Could his mother really have allowed him off on such an adventure so hideously ill prepared? I realise that she almost certainly knew nothing of his solitary rides. He would leave at three o'clock in the morning, before it was light. He'd be home in the evening, but wouldn't tell a soul what he'd done.
He ventured further afield. Aeroplane spotting had become a passion. As he explains, âThe only way I could see aircraft was to go to the airfields on my bike.'
I think of my own childhood, some of which was spent in the spectator lounges of Luton and Birmingham airports, listening to the indecipherable chatter from the control tower on my tiny transistor radio. My dad would sit opposite me, reading his paper patiently, as I noted down the registration number of each jet that taxied past and took off.
Then I thought of those twelve British plane spotters who were sentenced to three years in prison by the Greek authorities for indulging their passion near the Kalamata air force base. The Greek judiciary simple couldn't accommodate the notion that people might want to watch planes taking off and landing as a hobby. This is a very home-grown, very boyish madness.
It came as no surprise to me that, sooner or later, Graham's particular upbringing would lead him to a hobby like plane spotting, at which the British still excel. But the difference between his âpassion', and my âinterest', was vast.
At the age of twelve, he set off for Heathrow on his little rusty bike, a journey of almost exactly one hundred miles.
âHow did you plan to get back?' I ask him.
âI never thought about that. I never thought about it.' There's a flicker of a smile as he remembers this now. Or perhaps he's remembering the Lockheed Constellation, or the Bristol Britannia.
âWhen I'd quenched my thirst looking at the aircraft, I realised it was too late to get home, so I crawled into a ditch under a bush at the back of the BOAC hangars at Heathrow. I slept in that ditch. The next day, I watched the aircraft again and rode home.'
This became a habit.
One Easter, he rode to Heathrow and then on into London to find a Youth Hostel. There were only three in those days, and they were all fully booked. Not knowing what to do, he happened upon Euston Station, where a train for Birmingham was about to leave. He jumped on, paying for the ticket with the money he'd saved up for the Youth Hostel.
âI rode from Birmingham New Street station. I got home quite knackered at about teatime. Somehow, my mother knew what I'd been planning. She said, “I thought you were going to go to London?” I said, “I've been!”'
At a conservative estimate, the twelve-year-old Graham Webb had probably ridden one hundred and fifty miles, stuck in top gear, on a rusty bike, all on his own, without anything to eat.
Throughout his childhood, as he recalls, his family expressed not the slightest bit of interest in his cycling.
His mother, Lilly, had remarried. But not happily. Her new husband was an elderly neighbour called Albert Whitton. Graham suspects that she did this to free up their own house so that his sister's young family had somewhere to live.
But Graham joined the new household on sufferance only.
âYou can bring that kid with you,' Whitton had told Lilly, âbut you'll have to go out to work for him. I'm not keeping him.'
âHe was a terrible bloke. He'd pin mother up against a wall with a big carving knife against her throat. I couldn't say anything. I thought he'd go after me with the knife.'
At fourteen, he left school and started work on an assembly line building imitation log fires. Everyone else in the factory was a woman. Perhaps his isolation grew more pronounced. Certainly his disappearing acts grew more ambitious. He saved up money, and he took two weeks' holiday, intending to ride round the entire coast of Wales, pedalling all day until it got too dark, and then pitching his tent wherever he stopped.
All the while, he knew nothing of the sport of cycling. âI didn't even know it existed.'
âSo if someone had talked to you about the Tour de France . . .?'
âI wouldn't have known what they were talking about, no.'
The only competitive cycling he'd ever seen had been dirt-track racing in a bombsite in Birmingham. âRoad racing, time-trialling, track racing? I didn't know they existed.'
A chance meeting with a member of the Solihull Cycling Club changed all that. He suggested Graham went to a club meeting at Knowle Village Hall.
âThere must have been a couple of hundred people milling around, just chatting. I sat there, not talking to anyone, wondering what it was all about. People thought I was thick.' By now he was seventeen.
He was asked if he was going to do the âClub 25'. He had no idea what the âClub 25' was. But they took his two shillings and his signature. He was entered.
âI got the start sheet. I was number 22. It was a time trial, but I didn't know what a time trial was. I thought everyone started together in a race. We were given a changing room, which was like someone's garden shed. All these blokes were getting into racing gear. I'd just got some cut-off jeans and a T-shirt and a pair of pumps.
âI got a bit fed up with sitting in this garden shed, so I went to have a look at the start, and there were blokes being pushed off.'
Eventually, despite him missing his start time, they let him start. But still he didn't understand the race.
âI thought, âChrist! I've got to catch all the blokes in front of me, to win this race!''
He caught his âminute man', and eased up so that the rider could get on his wheel, and they might work together.
âBut he started shouting, “Bugger off! Bugger off!” I thought, that's nice, you know! I'm offering to help him, and he's telling me to bugger off. So I did.'
At the finish line, he was still none the wiser. He knew he'd not caught everyone, but couldn't figure out what was supposed to happen next.
âI thought, bugger this, it's still early. I'll just go out for a ride on my bike. It's got to be much more enjoyable than what these blokes are doing.'
Needless to say, he set the fastest time that day. They told him the following week when he returned to the village hall. He remembers the embarrassment. âI went blood red. I hated any sort of spotlight.'