I didn't know that Newtown Row and The High Street was once called Walmer Lane! I wonder who 'Walmer' was? I did discover a very old photograph in the forum showing a bandstand in Walmer's Recreation Park.oops sorry BB i should have read that post properly...back to walmer park..how well i remember that engine as well as my aunt lived in bracebridge st and i would stay weekends sometimes and myself and cousin would play in the park/rec...happy days and thanks for the photo of the engine as well...just as an aside and you may well know this already but newtown row and the high st used to be called walmer lane..many years ago of course..as for the origins of the engine and who put it there(and also what happened to it) we have a couple of members who maybe able to check the newspaper archives for you as it may have been reported...fingers crossed..actually if memory serves me right i think we have a thread for walmer rec
lyn
Hi Stan
I remember that long queue up the stairs to see Santa (and uncle Holly) at Lewis's back when a visit to Santa's grotto was a big thing.
As for clearing a cheque, it always has been 3 clear complete working days, which in reality means five days.
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Hi Phil,
Thanks for the badge fella...... I have never met anyone that remembers them, so pleased that you have confirmed that my memory is in tact. As for cheques.... well it just seemed longer when i used them... thank god for electronic transfer now hehe. Much appreciated man.
Stan
Stan
Electronic transfers are not so hot, whenever I pay anybody it disappears from my account as soon as I pay it, but whenever I receive payment advice of such a payment into my account I am informed it might take 5 to 7 days to appear on my account.
Three to five days to clear a cheque doesn't sound so bad now.
My wife visiting Santa at Lewis's when she was 2 yrs old.View attachment 125619
Pearks, Wrensons, George Masons, how many other grocers were there around Birmingham and the West Midlands that had multiple stores? Where the three mentioned local or semi national. I know that when we visited other towns, we came across David Greig as a semi supermarket group similar to Wrensons/Peakes/Masons and there were others, whose names now elude me, particularly in the Home Counties. In the Wrensons picture, notice how smart the staff were, all white coats and aprons, funny how we are now beset by health and safety in almost everything we do and yet there are no latex gloves or hairnets or hats of any sort and we are all still here, the bacon on the slab at the back of the counter in the slicing machine - Berkel? is that right?- the scales, older shops still had them with weights and a steel tray, the go ahead crowd had the ones with the pointer, which showed exact weights...shall I put another one on, if it was under or shall I take one off, if it was over. But best of all was the Bull Ring and 'those scales are on the slope, put them straight before you weigh up my potatoes, sprouts, apples' - take your choice my mother was always at war with the market traders in the Bull Ring. However the point of this post was remind me where Wrensons was in Orphanage Road please.There was a Pearks shop on the Beeches Estate where I lived. Another chain of grocery shops around in the 1950s was Wrensons. I remember the one in Hawthorn Rd and another in Birchfield Rd. A photo of a Wrensons shop possibly in Orphanage Rd Erdington.
from Wrensons thread https://birminghamhistory.co.uk/forum/index.php?threads/wrensons.674/page-8#post-450011 and https://birminghamhistory.co.uk/forum/index.php?threads/wrensons.674/page-8#post-537949
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Hi Bob, with ref to the Wrensons possibly being in Orphanage Road I took the information from the Wrensons thread but it was not entirely clear. Click the links and have a look at the thread ... see what you think. Or perhaps someone from Erdington can comment.
oldmohawk
You can also see Orchard tyres who supplied all the tyres for Stockland coaches.
You did not mention the toilet facilities in the time back along. Nowadays the site has to have canteen and welfare facilities, be well guarded with either Haras fencing or interlocking barriers, licences - from the council - to dig up the street, licences gained through faux NVQs to manually dig up and resurface the street and one of those must be related to a supervisors qualification. Risk Assessments, method statements, licences to operate any plant being used on the site, it goes on and on. Back to the toilet facilities, in busy areas there were ample public toilets in towns in those far off days, now a rarity or a local pub and judging by some recent posts on other topics, plenty of pubs and in the countryside there was always the hedgerow, happy day.Funny looking at the images in #166. Workmen always erected those canvas tents when digging the street up. No street worksite would be complete with it the coke brazier and black iron kettle. Tea made on a coke brazier well boiled with milk and sugar already in, what's not to love.
OMHi Bob, with ref to the Wrensons possibly being in Orphanage Road I took the information from the Wrensons thread but it was not entirely clear. Click the links and have a look at the thread ... see what you think. Or perhaps someone from Erdington can comment.
oldmohawk