OldBrummie
master brummie
Out of curiosity, does anyone know if there are any lists of ARP Wardens who served during WW2, specifically in Sheldon and on the knocker, Lyndon Road?
OldBrummie
OldBrummie
Hiya! I live on common lane, 86 it’s a bungalow right next to the flats on keeble grove, I was trying to picture where This photo is on common lane. I’m so desperate to know more about my home xxYou're welcome Robert. So pleased that it showed your old home.
This is how it looked on that corner, before the prefabs. This was part of Moat Farm, in 1936. The house you can see, in the background, is now the Common Lane convenience store.
Ann
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Hiya! I was just hoping and wondering you could remember anything at all about my home, 86 common lane. It lays back a bit next to keeble grove. I love my home it has so much character, would love to know if anyone remembers anything about it!I know this thread is a few year old but I live in the shop that was on common lane. Obviously not a shop anymore but it definitely was the shop. The lady over the road had been here 53 years and has just been talking to me about it.
HelloHiya! I was just hoping and wondering you could remember anything at all about my home, 86 common lane. It lays back a bit next to keeble grove. I love my home it has so much character, would love to know if anyone remembers anything about it!
Omg this is amazing!!!! I adore every last piece of info you have given!!!Hello
I might be able to help. I look at this forum often but have only just come across your post. My grandparents moved into 86 around about 1932 just after it was built and rented it at first. Their names were Albert and Mabel Mobley and their daughter Brenda, my mother, was born there in 1933. Many family members lived there over the years including myself from 1956-62. Albert died in 1960 and some time after that Mabel bought the property staying there till her death in 1994 when it was sold on.
It was very different then to what it is now. The kitchen was a narrow add on to the whole left of the property from front to back separated by a door just by the bathroom window leading to a storage "corridor" and ending at a brick built coal house and then a door onto the garden.
Water came from a well just outside the coal house and had to be pumped by hand to a holding tank in the loft, I think the other bungalows next door used the same underground stream. In 1945 their eldest son Norman was demobbed and he with his wife and son moved in until 1947/48. Albert and Mabel moved out for that time with my mother to Norfolk and when they returned the well had been capped off and water was supplied by mains.
During his stay Norman converted the front of the building and the garage on the right hand side to a grocery shop probably selling anything anyone wanted. Mabel is in the first photo in front of the window which is now the front door. It was originally to the side directly behind Mabel. Albert and my father are in the second photo in the area used as the shop and you can see the garage extreme right.
The back garden was huge, much bigger than now stretching down to the ground that now has garages built on it. The building in this photo was the air raid shelter and housed chickens and geese. You can see how big the garden was from the plan. I played with a girl named Diane Hollowood who lived in a bungalow further down the lane on the same side and they had brick built pigstys in the back garden.
What is now the loft space was converted into a bedroom with a dormer window in the roof at the back.
Number 84 was home to Mr and Mrs Turner, and 82 was home to the Griffiths who ran a haulage firm from the property and as you can see from the map their ground was enormous housing their wagons.
I've enjoyed my ramble down memory lane so I hope this helps.
Steven
Steven, thank you for your ramble down memory lane! It was most insightful and brought back many memories for me & I am sure others!Hello
I might be able to help. I look at this forum often but have only just come across your post. My grandparents moved into 86 around about 1932 just after it was built and rented it at first. Their names were Albert and Mabel Mobley and their daughter Brenda, my mother, was born there in 1933. Many family members lived there over the years including myself from 1956-62. Albert died in 1960 and some time after that Mabel bought the property staying there till her death in 1994 when it was sold on.
It was very different then to what it is now. The kitchen was a narrow add on to the whole left of the property from front to back separated by a door just by the bathroom window leading to a storage "corridor" and ending at a brick built coal house and then a door onto the garden.
Water came from a well just outside the coal house and had to be pumped by hand to a holding tank in the loft, I think the other bungalows next door used the same underground stream. In 1945 their eldest son Norman was demobbed and he with his wife and son moved in until 1947/48. Albert and Mabel moved out for that time with my mother to Norfolk and when they returned the well had been capped off and water was supplied by mains.
During his stay Norman converted the front of the building and the garage on the right hand side to a grocery shop probably selling anything anyone wanted. Mabel is in the first photo in front of the window which is now the front door. It was originally to the side directly behind Mabel. Albert and my father are in the second photo in the area used as the shop and you can see the garage extreme right.
The back garden was huge, much bigger than now stretching down to the ground that now has garages built on it. The building in this photo was the air raid shelter and housed chickens and geese. You can see how big the garden was from the plan. I played with a girl named Diane Hollowood who lived in a bungalow further down the lane on the same side and they had brick built pigstys in the back garden.
What is now the loft space was converted into a bedroom with a dormer window in the roof at the back.
Number 84 was home to Mr and Mrs Turner, and 82 was home to the Griffiths who ran a haulage firm from the property and as you can see from the map their ground was enormous housing their wagons.
I've enjoyed my ramble down memory lane so I hope this helps.
Steven
RichardSteven, thank you for your ramble down memory lane! It was most insightful and brought back many memories for me & I am sure others!
Just wow!!!! I absolutely love all of this! It makes my heart so warm!!!Our cat is called Minstrel
I don't remember any Josie, certainly in the family.
The porch where my grandfather is sitting cross legged is actually now the front of the house and the window behind was inside that room, so the wall has been demolished and moved forward. The room was used as the "posh" room for evenings only. And where the black and white TV used to be. That room used to be very small and here is another photo I've found when it was used for the reception on my parents wedding 10th. October 1953.
Seated around the table are Albert and Mabel on the right and opposite is my fathers' mother in the light coat with her step mother next to her in the dark coat. She was born in 1876.
As for the way Mabel was dressed...........she was a very eccentric lady. She had a market stall in the old rag market in Birmingham and went every Tuesday and Saturday and continued to do this well into her old age. In fact the bungalow was packed pretty much in every corner nook and cranny with old clothes, shoes and second hand stuff, and more stuff, and more stuff. She started this "business" from moving into the place selling second hang goods up and down the lane and was close to Mrs. Knight at number 121.
The road was so quiet with very little traffic and much narrower than it is now and no buses. On the opposite side of the road was tall hedging in front of the houses with a footpath in between, and as I remember it was all the way from Church Road at the bottom to Barrows Lane at the top.
Albert and Mabel had one more son Stanley who you can see in the photo standing second from right with fair hair and his wife Lydia first from right in the dark coat. She was Italian and they met in Trieste when he was serving his national service and married in the Salesian Church Trieste 1st. December 1951. He journeyed back from Italy by motor cycle with Lydia on the back. The line in the photo just to his left shoulder is the gas main going up from the meter directly beneath on the floor in a covered box.
The window you see has the porch area behind.
Hi Wendy led,Hi Bills
Hi Bills lad, I lived at 81 common lane(flat roof) as a child , did you live near the Marshalls and the Robinsons?? I think the Robinsons was the last one in the line of flat roof houses. I was friends with Margaret Robinson . Wendy
Does anyone have any photos of Cranes Park Road from when the houses were built, names of the first residents and WW2 bombings.Not sure if this is the right place for this as it covers more than one topic re Silvermere R0ad school.
My Mom lived in Cranes Park Road ( Peggy Harris). She was at Silvermere around 1940, before Mapledene was built (1950). Never went to to Sivermere but remember going to an open day with my Mom in the early 1960s and her telling me of an unexploded bomb that got lodged in the stair railings between first and second floors. I remember viewing a staircase from the outside, which was facing Parkdale Road, which I assume had not been been fully built up at the time of the bombing? The attached street map shows where I think I remember my Mom explaining where the bomb had lodged.
My Moms younger brother later attended Silvermere (Michael Harris) though he was 13 years younger than my Mom - this would have been in the 50's - probable class mate around this time was Diane Burton from Whitecroft Road, Michael Mann Normanton Avenue, Peter Green Cranes Park Road
Odd coincidence, my dad took movie film in Elmdon Park in winter 1963 and my Mom recognised a lady on skis as being her old gymn teacher from Silvermere - still to copy film and upload
I would have thought!You would have thought that one of those ladies had a connection with Common Lane...