Does anyone have any information regarding the old firm of Fischers; they sold watch and clock parts.
As a child I visited the shop on a Saturday morning, with a list of watch/clock-parts required by my father. Because of my unstable mememory, I can recall the shop itself, and the eccentric staff who worked there; but for the life of me I can't recall where the shop was! Any ideas?
I think it was a Jewish firm; the people who worked there were a very odd lot indeed, always loudly back-chatting, and insulting each other...appearing, at least on the surface, to be very grumpy and sarcastic. They all wore a jewellers' lens screwed into one eye, or dangling from a cord around their necks. Those who wore spectacles had the lens attached to their glasses, to be flipped-in or out, as required. They all smoked incessantly, never removing the cigarettes from their mouths ... the fag-ash flew everywhere! Whenever someone opened the shop door a great cloud of tobbaco smoke used to escape into the street....and seen from outside, it looked as if the place was on fire!
The shop was always very busy on a Saturday morning and I sometimes had to queue for ages to get served; as a child I thought it was like having to spend time with the living dead! Everything took such a long time to happen; long, tedious discussions about obscure watch-parts; measurings, micrometers and long-winded tales on excruciatingly boring topics. Of course, I'd now I'd be fascinated by it all; but not then!
As a child I visited the shop on a Saturday morning, with a list of watch/clock-parts required by my father. Because of my unstable mememory, I can recall the shop itself, and the eccentric staff who worked there; but for the life of me I can't recall where the shop was! Any ideas?
I think it was a Jewish firm; the people who worked there were a very odd lot indeed, always loudly back-chatting, and insulting each other...appearing, at least on the surface, to be very grumpy and sarcastic. They all wore a jewellers' lens screwed into one eye, or dangling from a cord around their necks. Those who wore spectacles had the lens attached to their glasses, to be flipped-in or out, as required. They all smoked incessantly, never removing the cigarettes from their mouths ... the fag-ash flew everywhere! Whenever someone opened the shop door a great cloud of tobbaco smoke used to escape into the street....and seen from outside, it looked as if the place was on fire!
The shop was always very busy on a Saturday morning and I sometimes had to queue for ages to get served; as a child I thought it was like having to spend time with the living dead! Everything took such a long time to happen; long, tedious discussions about obscure watch-parts; measurings, micrometers and long-winded tales on excruciatingly boring topics. Of course, I'd now I'd be fascinated by it all; but not then!