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Aldbrough, the Cliffs and Beach c1955

Aldbrough, the Cliffs and Beach c1955
 
 

Aldbrough, the Cliffs and Beach c1955 Ref: a316006

Aldbrough's local area

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Memories of Aldbrough, the Cliffs and Beach

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Photo of Atwick, Cliff Lane c1960

Atwick, Cliff Lane c1960
Ref: A172010

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ATWICK HOLIDAYS

Our family (from Bradford) would rent one of the chalets on the cliff top at the end of Cliff Road, 2nd in on the left I think. Me and my 2 sisters would walk down to the farm at the end of the road for fresh milk. Each year the garden got smaller as the cliff collapsed.
We had the WW2 pillboxes on the beach to play in. RAF planes would have target practice over the sea.
The yearly trip into Bridlington for a trip on the Yokshire Belle or the Boys  Own round to Flamborough Head.

Shared on 12 August 2008 by Andy Howard.

Granny

Gertrude Margaret Whytehead (Daisy) was our grandmother. She was the daughter of Henry Yates Whytehead and we believe her mother was also Gertrude.
They lived at Bewholme Grange and Granny may have been born there in 1878.
She was the eldest of a large family. We know of Alice, Leonard and Frederick but we are sure there were more.
Henry Y Whytehead may have been a doctor.
We have an old black and white photo of the house but don't know when it was taken.
You could have a copy if you wish but I'm not sure how to send it by e-mail. I'll investigate if you like.
We would like to know when the house was built and if a member of our family commissioned it.
We'd like to know where family members are buried if in this area.
Liz Sowerby

Shared on 25 April 2009

Photo of Hull, New Police Station 1903

Hull, New Police Station 1903
Ref: 49833

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Opening of the 'New' Hull Police Station

My great-grandfather, Richard Gillett, was an Alderman and laid the foundation stone for this building. I don't suppose that there is a photo of the Foundation Stone anywhere, is there? A member of our family has the engraved silver trowel and gavel which were presented to him at the time.
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~sheilaweston/gillett/Gillett%20Family%20Photographs/richardgillett.html

Sheila Weston, nee Trenbath

Shared on 05 September 2009 by Sheila Weston.

Photo of Hull, Savings Bank c1965

Hull, Savings Bank c1965
Ref: H133169

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Summer Holidays

My Mam was from Hull and I was born there. We moved to Wales when I was three. We used to go to visit my Gran in Glebe Road, and my Aunt Hilda. We loved the patties and fish and chips. They were the best. I remember the trams, the parks and riding bikes. Us children, my brothers and I, did not like the smell from reckits factoryl My dad used to laugh as we held our noses walking past there. They were great holidays.

Shared on 04 October 2008 by Eira Waite.

Photo of Hull, Savings Bank c1965

Hull, Savings Bank c1965
Ref: H133169

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My first and last jobs in Hull

This is a photo of the Derringham Branch of the Hull Savings Bank where I started as a junior bank clerk at the age of 16 on 31st August 1965, probably around the time when this photo was taken. It certainly looks right.

This was my first job after leaving Riley High School, just down the road from the bank. The heating in the building was powered by a big coal fired boiler in the cellar and one of my main tasks was to shovel coal down the coal chute and stoke the boiler, not what I had expected when I had applied for a job as a bank clerk and all this for the princely salary of £325 a year.

What a lovely buiding this was, especially in 1965. Polished wood panelling everywhere; solid mahogany counter; highly polished (and dangerously slippery!) parquet floors where the staff worked and a beautiful mosaic floor in the customer area with the Kingston Upon Hull three crowns crest set proudly into the mosaic. Sadly the mosaic was vandalised by builders in the 1980's when the floor was carpeted.

The counter was equiped with "dip and scratch" pens and ink pots. One of my friends at the branch, who was not much older than me, would fill the ink pots each morning and slide them down the counter to me. I didn't always catch them and the mosaic floor ended up with several blue india ink stains.

I was moved to the Beverley High Road branch after about nine months. No more shovelling coal. One of my contemporaries based at another branch was a young lady called Angela Nicholson. I really liked her but I was much too shy to ask her out. Imagine my dismay when she was moved to the Derringham Branch to replace me! I wonder what became of her.

In 1971, I went back to Derringham Branch as a cashier, working for a smashing manager, Jim Reveler. Jim had been a bomber pilot in the war and looked the part - a super bloke who took the time to teach me some great lessons about dealing with people. I stayed for a couple of years, during which I married my lovely wife Helen, who worked at the Southcoates Branch on Holderness Road (I had long got over Angela Nicholson by then!) There was lot of this inter-branch romance stuff.

Finally, in 1986 I returned to Derringham as the Manager for four very happy years before I was promoted to the main branch in Leeds. It was a dream come true for me.

My abiding memories of my three spells at Derringham Branch, as Junior, then cashier and finally as manager, are of the lovely people who were customers and the wonderful colleagues I was priveleged to work with, especially in my four years as Manager from 1986 to 1990, which were easily the most enjoyable of my 27 years in banking. What a team! Geoff, Ian, Bruce, Judith, Mary, Dawn, Lorraine, Angela, Carole, Sue, Jane, Debbie and many others, who made my working life a great pleasure. And of course, this lovely building.

Happy days.

Shared on 16 August 2006 by David Farrow.

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