Garth
Hitchens has always loved music.
The
church organ has been the instrument closest to his heart but it
was not the first he learned to play.
"When
I started music first I was 9-years-old. My first music lesson was
with a Mrs Betty Keast out at Sticker. I had my push bike and went
up over what we called May's Hill which went up to a place called
Five Turnings."
But
for his first lesson Garth was a bag of nerves. He almost did not
make it.
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Old
Cottages in Polgooth's village centre |
"I
went down the wrong road and I got lost. I came home squalling.
My brother took me down. I can still see Mrs Keast knitting in her
porch. From then on I was learning the piano with her. She was a
very nice lady, not at all strict. I didn't like the piano and after
a while I gave it up."
But
fate was to deliver a new challenge for Garth in the form of an
organ with a big family connection.
"My
Grandfather said to my mother if I would like to take up the organ
he would pay for my lessons," says Garth.
"I
started with a professional musician called Mr Crocker. I continued
with him and used to go to the Congregational Chapel which was in
St Austell where the Halifax Building Society now stands. I was
with Mr Crocker until I was 20-years-old."
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The
organ in the old chapel where Garth first played in front of
the Polgooth congregation |
When
Garth was 14-years-old, he did his first public performance on the
Polgooth Chapel's Children's Anniversary, taking over from his Grandfather
May.
"I
was very nervous, no matter how much training you do, you always
get nervous to this day," says Garth. "From the day when I first
started playing the Polgooth organ, I have been playing in Polgooth
for 54 years."
Garth's
playing has been heard in numerous chapels over the years.
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The
present day chapel where Garth still plays |
"I
go around to various churches and chapels all over St Austell. My
priorities lie with Polgooth Chapel, I was brought up in the village
and I wont let them down."
For
Garth music is a big part of his life.
"I
can always remember when we used to practice with the children for
the Anniversary events, I was sitting up on the organ stool, and
I was always one for discipline. I used to bark at them quite often.
But we all enjoyed the rehearsals."
"I
think its my duty to God that I have got to continue my work," says
Garth. "Music is my hobby and my life."
Meet
Polgooth's oldest resident Read about chapel life in Polgooth Find out about the Mays of Polgooth Take a walk around Hawke's shop An amazing Polgooth mining discovery
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