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Ealing 1962 Onwards

I moved to Windsor Road in Ealing in 1962 when I was 11. I remember the Grove with fond memories. All the shops! The tailor's shop and the barbers. The sweet shop which always had a bowl of water for the dogs outside in the summer, the butchers (Mum used to send me there on a Saturday for a piece of beef costing about 3s or 3/6d (15 or 17 1/2p) The man that ran the butchers along with his 2 sons also had a cafe a few doors up. (In the 1970s I worked in the offices along the Uxbridge Road and used to go there and have a good meal with chips which were 1p extra!) The penny library next to the car park (yes only a penny a book!). Along from there in the Grove was a piano shop, then the Kings Arms pub, a dairy, the paraffin shop and the haberdashery shop, then the bread shop (one of the first bakers with a bread slicer!). At the top of Windsor Road opposite the church, there was a red telephone box which we used all the time. Not many houses had phones and of course mobiles were not invented. You put money in Slot A and pushed the button when someone answered and pushed button B to retrieve any money. Along The Mall on the right hand side there used to be a machine where you could buy milk in cartons plus of course the usual cigarette machines. The mall had Timothy Whites chemist, Macfisheries, the ABC and of course Bentalls - there used to be a 'nanny' available to look after the babies in the foyer while the mums shopped: I remember the big posh Silver Cross prams with screaming infants! Going towards West Ealing on the left hand side opposide the church, I remember Woolworths up from Lilly and Skinners. Woolworths had a wooden floor and a lady behind each counter to serve you. Inside the doors there were plastic macs for sale on the right and a record counter on the left. I used to save up my pocket money to buy a record and play it on my Dansette record player. There was a counter selling broken biscuits, and the cold meats section boasted cold saveloys which I adored! There was a toy section, household counter selling vinegar bottles and glasses etc and another counter selling underwear. At the end of the shop there was a counter selling snacks. In those days there were only filled rolls, curled up sandwiches and cakes. There was a rotating machine full of orange juice with a plastic orange on the top spinning round! You could of course have coffee or tea. I remember the awful smogs and the heavy snow in 1962/63. There were long icicles hanging off every window ledge along Windsor Road. I remember going shopping on the bus to West Ealing and visiting Rowses, Sanders and Daniels, all of which were large department stores. We shopped locally at Mr Jones Fish & Chip Shop in Grove Place, Youngs Bakeries, Stockwell Chemists, Martins Newsagents and the ironmongers shop whose name I cannot recall. These shops were just before you turned left into the Grove. I regularly went to the Walpole Cinema and the Forum and took ballroom dancing lessons at Les Wildes just up from the cinema. I danced every Thursday night at the Blue Triangle hut opposite the Town Hall (the hut is still there - does anybody remember going there?). On Saturday nights at Greenford Starlite and at various Town Halls and Community Centres we danced to The Who, Small Faces, Georgie Fame, the Animals, Geno Washington, Long John Baldry etc. I went to the Grange School in St Mary's Road. I commenced my nurse training at King Edward's, in Mattock Lane in 1974 and remember the tiny casualty unit, pharmacy and no automatic doors then, they were all rubber! I remember Ealing with affection. Hardly any traffic. Ealing was a real community and Queen of the Suburbs.

A memory of Ealing in Greater London shared on Wednesday, 6th January 2010.

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Comments

RE: RE: Ealing 1962 Onwards

I think the ironmongers was called Clay's, it was next-door to Martins and there was another sweetshop further along, it might have been next-door to Youngs on the other side.
I do remember the fish & chip shop very well but I can only remember there being a lady there.
We lived nearer St.Mary's Church and my Mum did her shopping in St.Mary's Road at Percy & Perry the butchers and Harris the bakers at the other end of the parade from Juster's Stores at the corner of Sunnyside Road.
I started at Grange Infants in 1957, moved up to the Juniors in 1960 and had my appendix taken out at King Edward's at some time while I was in Mr.Vaux's class in the last two years of the Juniors!

Comment from John Wilson on Wednesday, 24th February 2010.

RE: RE: Ealing 1962 Onwards

Hi John

You are right!! The Ironmongers was indeed called Clays!

Comment from Diane Sambridge on Thursday, 25th February 2010.

RE: RE: Ealing 1962 Onwards

I very much enjoyed reading your report on Ealing in the 1960's and remember the shops and places you named although by then I had moved to Greenford and was married with a child. My memories were more of Ealing in the 1940's and 1950's but nothing much had changed by the 1960's - unlike now when it is difficult to find many places left other than in the memory.

Comment from Kathleen F Shorey on Thursday, 8th July 2010.

RE: RE: RE: Ealing 1962 Onwards

I moved to Ealing with my twin brother David from the East End in 1960. Started at St. Saviour's school which was handy as you could see the playground from my bedroom window until something happened and then my mum would be straight into the school to sort us out. I remember Miss Ivy and Freddie Chinsman. My dad ran the shop at no 17 The Grove for a few years and then went to work for his uncle who lived above the butchers, I think at no 23. I thought the ironmongers at the corner of the High Street was called Hoopers... As we grew up the Queen Victoria pub became almost the focal point of ealing in the early 1970s. I remember Gihams Transport in Bakers Lane (first left along the Grove). Jim Ford owned the butchers and the cafe (which we would frequent when the pub was shut), his 2 sons were Brian and ???. A number of houses along Bakers Lane were still awaiting demolition from the war in the early 1960s. Moved out in 1976 but came back to marry a girl from Disraeli Toad in 1977. Both of us had gone to Grange Junior School but 3 years apart. I was in Mr Vaux's class which helped as he ran the school football team as well. My sister also went there, one of her classmates was the late Lillian Board the athlete. Also she told me of lots of wild nights at the Ealing Jazz Club opposite the station, also with Long John Baldry, the Stones, Rod Stewart (all were still teenagers). After Grange Juniors we went to Ealing Grammar School, still could get to school in under 1 minute if I tried, you could get caned then if you were caught walking in Ealing without your cap or tie.

Comment from Steve Anderson on Sunday, 25th July 2010.

RE: RE: Ealing 1962 Onwards

see southallmessage knowhere site local memories 40s 60s etc

Comment from Yvonne Butler on Thursday, 17th February 2011.

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