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  1. ChrisM

    Acknowledging sources

    I agree with you there 100%, Vivienne. Current culture - and especially Facebook culture - dictates that everything online is up for grabs, it's free to do what one likes with it and why on earth should one spare a thought for the mug who has expended time and effort and possibly money in...
  2. ChrisM

    Is This Your Motor?

    Thanks for that, John and Pete.. You sound pretty convinced, John, and I am too (well, up to about 98 percent!) The only slight reservation I have is the design of the mud wings. That range of Fords seem always to have had perfectly rounded wings, rather than the ones possessed by this coupe...
  3. ChrisM

    BOOK - can't find this book anywhere?

    There's a Parish Councillor in Stockland, Devon by the name of Bryan Drew. His email address is online. Could he be the author? Very probably so. Why not try contacting him? Chris
  4. ChrisM

    Is This Your Motor?

    Thanks for your interest in this. This is the last one in the series taken at the same time. The convertible behind the little boy. My immediate thought was a Ford Prefect convertible - I have seen one or two and remember them well. That was because of the chromium-plated boot hinges and the...
  5. ChrisM

    Is This Your Motor?

    The overtaking car still looks a bit like a Morris 10 or 12 to me. I used to be able to recognise them, from childhood, and can still sort of visualise them. It's the face - the relationship of headlights to radiator and bumper- which rings bells for me. The clincher would be the radiator grill...
  6. ChrisM

    HELP WANTED PLEASE

    Lyn, that link provided by Janice looks very useful and virtually confirms that this was called a "Tracer Card" and supplemented a man's personal Record. The link tells us about Royal Artillery records: the example there looks so similar to yours and even mentions "Bty" (="Battery") here and...
  7. ChrisM

    Is This Your Motor?

    Essential user's allowance, John. A tiny ration given to those who needed to run a car because of the demands of work or other "approved" activities. My father had one because of his responsibility in the running of a large metal producing factory and also his spare-time occupation of local...
  8. ChrisM

    Is This Your Motor?

    Many thanks for the interest. Here's a very slightly different view of the overtaking car. Chris
  9. ChrisM

    Is This Your Motor?

    "Is this your motor?".....A bit unlikely a question, this, as the image isn't good enough to show the numberplate! And it's probably as far back as winter 1941 or 1942 as well. Foley Road, Streetly. A fairly bog-standard car but I can't remember its make. Any suggestions please? There's...
  10. ChrisM

    Uniforms of WW2

    Thanks for that very interesting article, Viv. What I find staggering is the mention of a possible weekly wage of £25, even for skilled men such as these. That's about five times an average factory worker's income at the time. The price of the end-product - a hand-made officer's uniform - must...
  11. ChrisM

    GET WELL SOON ERIC....(cookie273uk)

    Best wishes for a speedy recovery, Eric. Chris
  12. ChrisM

    MERRY CHRISTMAS BHF 2022

    Great image! Suspect that it is 1939 or 1940 (unless the balloon is misleading us). They weren't there at Christmas 1941...... Chris
  13. ChrisM

    MERRY CHRISTMAS BHF 2022

    Happy Christmas, everyone! The earliest ones I really remember were all in wartime when mums and dads did their best to make them magical for us children. The food probably wasn't as plentiful and the presents may have been second-hand or home-made and in some households it wasn't the entire...
  14. ChrisM

    The Life and Military Service of a Hockley Lad - Stanley Easthope

    Thank you, Lyn and Mike. An eagle eye and just what was needed! Got mixed up with my "St.s"! Now corrected and an acknowledgement to BHF. Chris
  15. ChrisM

    Camps visited by Birmingham youngsters

    It has to be quite a few of them, Viv, even though in an area Like Birmingham many would have ended up doing essential war work in arms factories and would therefore have been on the reserved occupation list - whether they wanted to be or not. What a shame, isn't it, that despite our huge...
  16. ChrisM

    The Life and Military Service of a Hockley Lad - Stanley Easthope

    I have been writing up some information I have received from the family of a Hockley lad, Stanley Easthope, who in WW2 joined the Home Guard at a very early age and whilst on duty in 1942 or 1943 witnessed the death at a blitz-damaged building of a woman who had ignored warnings not to cross a...
  17. ChrisM

    THE WINTERS OF 47 AND 63

    FINALLY a now-versus-then Google Streetview image for anyone who knows that stretch of the Chester Road. Can hardly believe how much everything can change in (a mere!) 75 years when yesterday's image is so much clearer in the mind than today's. Chris
  18. ChrisM

    THE WINTERS OF 47 AND 63

    The memory in words........ WINTER 1947 Here are I and a couple of friends on the Chester Road in Streetly, on the hill leading up from the Parson & Clerk towards the Manor Road crossroads. (I'm on the right, in BVGS black-and-white scarf and short trousers). Great fun and an improvement over...
  19. ChrisM

    THE WINTERS OF 47 AND 63

    January/February 1947, Chester Road/A452 in Streetly, the hill beyond the Parson & Clerk, as you go up towards Brownhills. Yours truly, nearly 11, in BVGS black and white scarf (and short trousers, natch!), with two friends. A great day - remember it well! Chris
  20. ChrisM

    Castle Bromwich Spitfire Factory

    That's a great picture. Gives you an idea of what it was like, to be standing there and looking down the length of the huge shop. Chris
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