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  1. Ray T

    What do you watch on tv nowadays ?

    Having viewed all the British ones there, I've been enjoying Antiques Roadshow US on the YouTube channel through my smart TV. There are lots of interesting items and surprising values. Many of the antiques come from the UK and Europe, but the American ones sometimes have fascinating histories.
  2. Ray T

    Toy/Model Shops City Centre

    Back in the 50s, there was a model shop on the Stratford Road, near the Main Street junction. I can't remember the name, but I used to look longingly at the Hornby o-o locos and wagons in the window. There were Mammod steam engines too.
  3. Ray T

    What do you watch on tv nowadays ?

    I've been enjoying the old Lancelot series in black and white on Talking Pictures TV. It's amused me to notice that the actor Derren Nesbitt appears pretty much every week as a different character. Sometimes he's a baddy and gets run through by Lancelot, only to pop up next episode as a courtier...
  4. Ray T

    IT'S LYNS (ASTONESS )BIRTHDAY TO DAY FOLKS.

    A very happy birthday to you, Lyn. And many happy returns.
  5. Ray T

    sayings

    I remember my mother in 1950s Sparkbrook sometimes referred to a deceptive statement as being an "eye-gag". This was obviously the visual equivalent to the normal gag which impedes speech. I've never heard it used since those days.
  6. Ray T

    sayings

    In 50s Birmingham, any woman who exhibited airs and graces could be referred to as "Lady Muck", and also as "Lady Docker" by womenfolk, my mother included. A quick check online reveals that the said lady was born in 1906 and died in 1983, so was still going strong when she was a figure of...
  7. Ray T

    National Trust Back to Back houses Inge Street & Hurst Street

    Hello, Abigail, I grew up in a back-to-back in Sparkbrook in the 1950s. It was down an entranceway called Winterdyne Place in Long St. At the top of the entrance was a little shop owned by Mrs Spencer. I recall she used to break chunks off a large salt block and weigh them off to sell us. She...
  8. Ray T

    aston sheds

    I haven't been able to find Kampala in recent times either, Dave. I'd assumed it was scrapped before the publication of the 1961 Ian Allen combine I have but it's possible there was no such loco. It's a mystery, then, as to why I've been sure of that "Kampala" nameplate all these years. I can...
  9. Ray T

    aston sheds

    But now I ponder it, Kampala may have been a Patriot.
  10. Ray T

    aston sheds

    Penns, from my spotting by the Camp Hill station bridge in Montpellier St in the late 50s -- early 60s, I seem to recall several Jubilees. One I especially remember was Kampala. So long ago I can't be certain it wasn't at New St.
  11. Ray T

    Films From The 50s And 60s?

    Ah, the good old days. Back then, PC Dixon could walk into a warehouse to find a gang of armed thugs gathered round a safe and he'd say, "All right, you lot, you're nicked!" And the bruiser of a leader would say, "It's a fair cop, officer. We'll come quietly." How times have changed.
  12. Ray T

    Our childhood toys

    Before I could stretch to a transistor radio, as boy I made myself a crystal set from parts bought from a shop in town, whose name I can't remember. Having soldered the few components in accordance with a circuit drawing I had, and spread a thin wire around my bedroom ceiling to act as an...
  13. Ray T

    Cigarette smoking

    Some of those old Ronson lighters are sold for many hundreds of pounds among collectors. I think the most sought after is the table model with the simulated tropical fishes set in the sides. One appeared on Flog It and did very well indeed at auction.
  14. Ray T

    Snow Hill Station

    I copped Black Watch several times in the early 60s. I think it came through Camp Hill station and over the Montpellier St bridge near where I lived and train-spotted daily, but I'm not sure. I do remember the engine being something of a "regular" to me.
  15. Ray T

    Our childhood toys

    I remember Zeetas, which I think cost 6p and were moulded plastic, delta-shaped aeroplanes. They weren't very big and were launched by a small catapult and then soared about a bit.
  16. Ray T

    Films From The 50s And 60s?

    And on Freeview channel 81, Eric.
  17. Ray T

    Films From The 50s And 60s?

    Talking Pictures TV has a Facebook page, which I was invited to join yesterday.
  18. Ray T

    aston sheds

    Hello, Timbo90 Great memories you have. As a keen train spotter in probably 1961 or 62 I once saw Evening Star steam majestically over the Montpellier St bridge at Camp Hill Station (then disused) pulling nothing and heading towards Birmingham centre. I told my train-spotting pals and they...
  19. Ray T

    fish and chip shops

    Our chippy in the 50s was "Hicky's" (Hickey's?) around a corner off Long St where we lived. I think it was in King St, but it might have been Spark St, next one down. I remember "Hicky" wore a white coat and he had a crewcut and a very thick neck. Delicious fish and chips, though, wrapped in...
  20. Ray T

    Snow Hill Station

    I spent many happy hours there as a boy in the 50s, collecting numbers from the Kings, Castles, Halls and Granges.
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