Post script
trying to recall hoods ware house coming down from congreive street heading towards the sndipptts and springhil
it was the next road to lionell street birmingham B 1 in those days coming down to summerhill once known as paradise street
and right next to the summer row DHSS Office and the bill hoarding over the cannal bridge there next was Hoods ware houseing ,,,
BrumBum,
You don't give any dates or locations. If you did you might have a bit more success with photographs. I couldn't find anything about the company in the London Gazette, so proceeded to search the other newspapers. No photographs, but I can tell you that Mr Hood stood as the Liberal candidate for North Birmingham Constituency in 1905, though I do not know whether he was successful or not. He died in the 1920s and the following appeared in the Yorkshire Evening Post dated 5 January 1923.
Maurice
The 1950 OS map just shows an empty area (not numbered) right over to Cornwall St. Guess, with sudden change of address, the building was probably destroyed in the bombing
Hi Maurice and brumbun
i can tell you thats hoods ware housing was so huge it taken half the damm road
what ever the name of the road it must have been about six storeys high
and it was of a black brick work and yes maurice they was the vans they used
i wonder if this road is still in excistance
If anybody out there whom lives within that area or travelling that way
coming from dudley road to the city and you will be passing the summer hill social security office
its the very first road passing it once at the DHSS Office you see the huge street hhoarding of advertising
Then that is the very street they was in , from that very beginning of the corner to three parts down
you name it they sold it beleive me as you say maurice hey was importers and exporters and
sold her at home best wishes to you both ,, Alan,, Astonian,,,,
BrumBum,
From my examination of the newspapers, they were both importers and exporters and had premises in Bradford, Manchester and a couple of other places, none giving any address! No lettering on that vehicle either - almost a wish to remain anonymous. Obviously it was a wholesale only outfit.
Maurice
You did indeed, Mike, and what put me off was the listing that they were paper & general merchants, whereas the accent has been on hardware. It seems that hardware has been a very small part of their business, which by the mid to late 60s did not exist at all.
Hoods Paper & Packaging Limited, which was incorporated in 1922 and was at 35 Ludgate Hill in 2001 looks to have been the main part of the same outfit. They later moved to Bevan Way, B66, but according to the various company agencies, have now ceased trading - exact date unknown and nothing in the London Gazette either.
Edit: At the same Smethwick address now is Zero Cases, originally an American company, which could well have gobbled them up. Anybody's guess!
Maurice
Alan,
Despite a lot of digging, I've failed to find to find a photograph, a sketch or any other information as to what was on that corner of Edmund Street & Church Street. I've also failed to find any other Birmingham address for the Company. When I lived in the UK, and because I traded postcards, I used to buy from the various postcard fairs, most of which had a paper ephemera section. Here you could pick up old leases, wills & other legal documents as well as old company catalogues, which even if you didn't have an interest in the particular company, made an interesting read.
BrumBum,
Not sure whether it is a sign of the times as if you have a look at the many old traffic pictures on BHF, many commercial vehicles had company names and it was cheap advertising seen by lots of people and still is. Whereas newspaper & magazine advertising was an expensive one-off generally only seen by the buyer, and disposed of later. On the other hand, we know that at least one of the directors had some, how shall I put it, unusual beliefs (see my post #2 above). Perhaps this was just another of them!
Do you ever recollect seeing any Hood catalogues? If so, my comment to Astonian above might be work investigating.
Maurice