No, Lyn. Tesco built their first (I think) Birmingham store there, now Peacocks.cracking photo chris is the house still there as i cant recall seeing it on the high street
lyn
My memory is a little hazy but we left in (I think) the Spring of '63 - I went to live with family on Croftdown Road, Harborne - the Old MAn went to live in a huge old vicarage in the wilds of west ShropshireSurgery maked on this map from 1962
In those days even the small stores of Boots did more than dispense pre-packaged stuff. For instance, they would mix coal-tar with shampoo instead of having to pay through the nose for proprietary stuff and we used to buy a liquid soap called Sulphestol for washing up (I think it was a gallon at a time)Remember it well, used to do Saturday work at Boots the Chemists 2 doors down from Tesco in 1968, 69,70. When I went in Tesco to grab something for lunch in my white Boots staff coat, I'd get mistaken for a member of staff and asked various questions from customers in there. By that time that Tesco shop was well established.
By that time the Old Man was up in the hills of Shropshire, close to the Welsh border, the closest neighbour was half a mile away, a touch different from city life. I went to live in Harborne with aunts until I bought a semi in Wylde Green in 1969 and was finally exiled to North Wales in '78Treadwells at 253 listed on 1962 erolls but not on 1965. (Years in between are not on Ancestry).
I love the gender discriminationAlso October 1964
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The name rings a bell but in honesty, I'm not sure why. Across the road, I do remember Molly Norton who had a cosmetics shop and her brother, George, the optician above her shop. Molly had the Chanel franchise and used to take great delight in using the spray sample bottle to cover a 5 or 6-year-old boy in feminine fragrances. She was a great friend of my mother who died in 1950 when I was 7.Do you remember the Music Box across the road Chris ?
I remember the Music Box. You could choose a record and then go into a booth and listen to it.Do you remember the Music Box across the road Chris ?
We called them Tesco Specials. The had the hems turned up.I remember the Music Box well. I bought Space Oddity and Purple Haze from it in the late 60s. I remember Tesco's on the High Street at the same time too. We used to call their jeans Tesco Tearaways...
Not listed in 1968 phone book but 1970 has this entry. I post both as the B23 one is referred to as a restaurant.We called them Tesco Specials. The had the hems turned up.
I am sure there was a café called The Griddle Inn on the corner?
It seemed frightfully posh with its frothy coffee, toasted burger buns and they would remove the rind from the bacon on your bacon cob. A step too far for my friend and I, we asked her to put the rind back on the cob.
I was super sophisticated, I drank coffee in Rackhams' Cafe but the best place was the garden on the top of Lewis'sI also remember the Griddle Inn very well. Spent a lot of time in there the 70s drinking coffee. Up until the late 1960s, I only drank tea and it had to be made with strerra milk. But at the Griddle and Taylors/Owen Owen store cafe (upstairs), I drank many cups of frothy coffee. Felt much more sophisticated than good old tea.
That was the later ones. I remember the ones before plastic, where they were cardboard cartons coated with some wax and most of the taste was the waxI was very sophisticated back then too, I enjoyed one of these at the Palace cinema on most Saturday's....I can still taste that plastic!
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