BobWho was Mr Lacey? Golden Sovereign 36d, what a strange way to advertise the price presumably it was pre decimlisatoon and 3bob. But I cannot remember them at all and I did not stop smoking until 1975
Bob
Thank you, missed the important bits, speed reading.Bob
Who was Mr Lacey?
there's a clue in the window (you have to open wide)
There's an apostrophe after the 3'6d = 3 shillings and sixpence
Thanks for posting these a lovely surprise, had not seen this thread untill todaylast few...no objections to these photos being posted and shared on the net but could i just ask that if you do this please acknowledge the birmingham history forum ..thank you...hover over the photos to see the dates etcView attachment 136361View attachment 136362View attachment 136363View attachment 136364View attachment 136365
lyn
I was curious about W.M.Taylor who was a draper and furnisher. This thread (picture 3) seems to be the only photo on BHF and that appears to be after he ceased trading. However despite all the car publicity there is a good 'ghost sign' with Taylor's name and business description at roof level.last few...no objections to these photos being posted and shared on the net but could i just ask that if you do this please acknowledge the birmingham history forum ..thank you...hover over the photos to see the dates etcView attachment 136361View attachment 136362View attachment 136363View attachment 136364View attachment 136365
lyn
I was curious about W.M.Taylor who was a draper and furnisher. This thread (picture 3) seems to be the only photo on BHF and that appears to be after he ceased trading. However despite all the car publicity there is a good 'ghost sign' with Taylor's name and business description at roof level.
Mr. Taylor must have had a very good business in the past as I noticed an advert on tram (car 832 on route 36 Cotteridge), a photo taken early 1952 not long before closure of the tram route.
Generally tram adverts seemed to be those advertising, well known, large companies, but it seems post war many local companies had their adverts on trams. Maybe it was due to the trams having not long to so before withdrawal and short term contracts were a possibility. Just a guess.
Another Aston company to advertise on trams was Black's of High Street. Car 817, Cotteridge route, was photographed in
post war livery. Blacks, also drapers were mentioned in the High Street, Aston thread and elsewhere on BHF I think.

birminghamhistory.co.uk
Hi Eric,Just looking back through the photos I'm scratching my head about the Austins of Aston photo, the posh building on a corner, where was that, it's not the ex Taylors shop which was in Potter's Hill opposite the end of Barton's Bank.

Hello Radorails, Yes there are many programmes with Black & Taylor in, lots of them, but the reason Taylor was not in the other one, because Taylor's didn't have a High Street address.A few ads that you posted in the High Street, Aston thread do refer to 1950 - 52. It seems that Messrs. Black and Taylor did not have ads in the same issues - competitors I guess.
https://birminghamhistory.co.uk/forum/index.php?threads/high-street-aston.51295/page-5
The cafe at the bottom of Potters Hill is where I and a few of my school mates would meet instead of going to school, one day a stranger wearing a suit came into the cafe, we all thought he was the school board man, we all dashed out the back and tried to climb the wall to get out, he followed us out, but he only wanted to use to toilet.....god knows who he was, but he wasn't the school board man.....
No if you look at attached map, look at the red lines on both maps, and you will also see Selston on the right hand map running vertically.aston lad did the Potters hill in the photographs becom Selston Road later ?

No if you look at attached map, look at the red lines on both maps, and you will also see Selston on the right hand map running vertically.
Potters Hill is shown (red line) on these 2 maps (as it was & where it would be now)
View attachment 144424
Thank you, I’ve been tracing my family tree and it lists him as being a baker but it gives that address which is clearly his home by the picture, I’ll see if I can find out where his business wasHi Hmalins and welcome to the forum, No 24 would be roughly where the Morris Minor traveller is on the left hand side.
More images of the area here;
www.leroux.co.uk/aston
Thanks for this I am going to open up more avenues today and see if I can find Peter finney and see if they are related.. it seems there was a few generations of finney in Birmingham around that time but later moved to London.
Hi Hmalins and welcome to the forum, No 24 would be roughly where the Morris Minor traveller is on the left hand side.
More images of the area here;
www.leroux.co.uk/aston
The photo of the houses were the odd numbers so 24 would have been on the opposite side. The photo I believe was taken in 1963. We left in 1958 because they were supposed to be demolished but that did'nt happen for a few years. The cafe on the corner was a bit of a general store selling bread, milk etc although there was'nt much in there the lady who had the shop was lovely to us. The houses were all back to backs. I was born at No 9 which is the 4th house up. Seems strange seeing not just the house I was born in but the very room which was on the 1st floor. Eight of us living in 3 rooms before we moved in 1958.Hi Hmalins and welcome to the forum, No 24 would be roughly where the Morris Minor traveller is on the left hand side.
More images of the area here;
www.leroux.co.uk/aston
Really love those photos. My Mom`s Family lived in Webster Street (7/BO/44 to be exact.) Bring back a lot memories although I was brought up out of town.last few...no objections to these photos being posted and shared on the net but could i just ask that if you do this please acknowledge the birmingham history forum ..thank you...hover over the photos to see the dates etcView attachment 136361View attachment 136362View attachment 136363View attachment 136364View attachment 136365
lyn