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  1. M

    Crossroads programme

    I think it was on the image, but it's a long time since I've seen it!
  2. M

    Crossroads programme

    My dad had a photo from Noelle Gordon. The signature looked authentic! :)
  3. M

    C&A on Radio 4

    I don't really remember the men's clothes. There was a range for women called Yessica (the name sticks in my mind), but I don't know what was special about it!
  4. M

    C&A on Radio 4

    I didn't hear all the programme, but what I heard was interesting. You got to hear about what it was like to work there for many years. https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m002n7tx I wasn't sure whether this would be better in the Shops thread.
  5. M

    Homes Buildings

    It is - thank you! It's my grandfather's family, his parents and siblings.
  6. M

    Homes Buildings

    Thank you, that's very kind. The name is Riley, though has been spelled in various ways, but it's Riley on the census return.
  7. M

    Homes Buildings

    Thanks brummy-lad, it could well be that.
  8. M

    Homes Buildings

    I've just found several relatives I'd never heard of living at Court House, 6 Palmer Street, Aston in 1901, which look like the same place. They had come over here from Ireland the year before, as far as I know.
  9. M

    Driving in Days Gone By

    We have something similar. It's very bossy!
  10. M

    Driving in Days Gone By

    Oh yes, hand signals and running in. Our first car was an Austin A40, followed by a Singer Chamois. Cars used to have better names, like the Humber Super Snipe.
  11. M

    Lionel Shriver

    I didn't know her real name. Perhaps she has friends from the midlands?
  12. M

    Lionel Shriver

    I've just read her Should We Stay or Should We Go? which has a character, a doctor living in London but originally from Birmingham, who addresses his wife as bab. As Lionel Shriver (I don't know why she has a male name) is an American who lives in Brooklyn and London, I wonder how she got to...
  13. M

    Woolworths Memories

    It's good that they've kept some features like that.
  14. M

    Chow-row

    Yes, he was in the army during the war. That does make sense.
  15. M

    Lar Pom

    A great-aunt used to say this, but she wasn't originally from Birmingham. I also came across it in Julie Walters' memoir, where she says, I think, it was used by her grandmother.
  16. M

    Chow-row

    The other day I was in a very noisy tea room and remembered my dad referring to such a noise (clattering cutlery, excited children, shouting adults, etc.) as a chow-row. Is it a real word, or did he invent it?
  17. M

    1911 Census: 'feeble-minded'

    Thank you Janice and Pedrocut. It's an interesting point about words used now being unavailable at that time. Diagnoses are quite nuanced now (I think).
  18. M

    1911 Census: 'feeble-minded'

    I forgot to say that they were young adults, late teens and early twenties, and they were working. So far I haven't found them in 1921 - have to keep on looking. It's something to untangle. You're right, and I remember the term ESN (educationally sub-normal) in the 1970s. And it was at a time...
  19. M

    1911 Census: 'feeble-minded'

    In the 1911 census I found a couple of relatives I wasn't really aware of with this description (which is horrible). There's no way now of knowing what this actually meant, and anyone who would have known is no longer here, but it raises questions like did they go to an ordinary school and what...
  20. M

    Twister Twisterer Warp Twister

    Thanks, Vivienne14 and Johnny082. It all adds to the picture.
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