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Finedon, Allen Road c1960

Finedon, Allen Road c1960
 
 

Finedon, Allen Road c1960 Ref: f184020

Finedon's local area

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Photo of Irthlingborough, the Cross 1969

Irthlingborough, the Cross 1969
Ref: I33022

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The Bull

This scene in 2008 looks almost exactly the same as it did in 1969. Further down (out of sight of this picture) many changes have taken place. George Burton's papershop is now a pizza parlour (didn't even know what a pizza was in the early 60s!). Duncan's Chemist shop (famously made of wood) has been demolished, oh how as a youngster I drooled as I looked in his shop window at those wonderful blue and white striped Dinky toy boxes containing every car and lorry in miniture' Even when we were ill it usually meant a dollop of Lucozade (lovely stuff) from Duncan's. I can still remember the long glass bottle with a screw top and that wonderful transparent amber coloured wrapper which I can still hear to this day! It still amazes me as a feat of advertising and product image that during my childhood Lucozade was meant to aid recovery from illness and yet today it is targeted at fit athletic people. Mr Duncan always wore a crisp, starched white overall coat, looking every inch a man of the medical world and yet, all I ever remember him handing out was pleasure. The United Counties Bristol bus on the right would be waiting to travel to Kettering (route 413), it cost a penny halfpenny to travel up Finedon Road. The lorry centre right of the picture belonged to Townsend Carriers from Higham Ferrers and is a BMC engined Austin delivering parcels. The Bull public house to the left of the cross was the second pub situated on this site. My mother worked in The Bull when she was young. The original Bull was demolished before the war and rebuilt a few feet back from the road in readiness for the widening of the main A6 trunk road to the north but the effort was wasted as they decided to by-pass Irthlingborough altogether! The cross itself was moved during the early sixties to ease the traffic flow........ not that I can remember Irthlingborough ever being that popular that it resulted in traffic flow problems. God bless it! The cross became a meeting place for those poor unfortunate  chaps that were out of work during the hungry thirties. I'm proud to say I was born in Irthlingborough (although I don't live there now) and I have to say I still have fond memories of this lovely old place.

Shared on 12 March 2008 by Mick Austin.

Photo of Irthlingborough, High Street 1969

Irthlingborough, High Street 1969
Ref: I33021

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The Rookery

The parade of shops situated on the right was once the site of a large house called The Rookery, we lived at the Rookery from 1956 -1962. This adjoined the old Procea Products factory where my father worked for many years as a lorry driver/mechanic. Procea was famous for making slimming bread. The Rookery was owned by Procea and split into 3 houses, (we lived in the centre house), Jack Thomsons (manager at Procea) had some of the rooms and the Brailsford (dentist) family had the house closest to the factory. Sadly The Rookery was pulled down in the mid-60's. The house was grand with large windows and very high ceilings. Today The Rookery would have been a listed building and saved for future generations to enjoy. The 60's have a lot to answer for in building terms, the shops which now occupy the old Rookery site do nothing for the high street except perhaps making a little more room as the Rookery was situated nearer to the road, even in this late 60's photograph most of the shops remain empty.
The shop with the street blind open was Russell's butcher shop, I remember one of the fridge motors catching fire one night. The building next to Russell's was the cinema.  My sisters bedroom was situated on the high street front, she would sometimes go to bed early only to get up again when she heard people waiting to enter the cinema. She would put a long coat on and shoes, cross the road, watch the film (in fact 2 films in those days) and return across the street once the show was over! The cinema closed in the mid-60's, 80% of the sloping floor was removed and it became The Civic Hall and used for wedding receptions, meetings etc. For a short time a local man tried to re-vamp the cinema showing films like 'Gunfight at the OK Coral' this was short lived and the the Civic Hall continued in its mundane role. The hall decor was stuck in the 60's for many years with its bright yellows and matt greys. The projector holes at the far end of the hall were never covered or hidden and would always be a reminder of its former glory.  During functions at the hall the bar was always situated on the remaining sloping floor so one had the impression of being 'half cut' after a couple of pints as you made your way back to the flat part of the hall!! The Civic Hall was finally demolished this year (2007).
The 3 storey building next to the old cinema was a hardware shop selling everything from nails to bathrooms. The Co-Operative shop was built during the late 50's-early 60's. I remember the old shop with its wooden drawers from floor to ceiling containing god knows how many shirts etc.  I think the manager's name was Frank Richardson. The Co-Op sold almost everything in those days, today Tesco now own the Co-Operative building. Farther down the left hand side of the street was Roe's fish shop and the bank. Irthlingborough High Street is now a very busy place with car parking at a premium.  During the 50's (like so many other towns) there were just a few cars and it was common to see Procea's lorries parked outside the factory in the High Street, in those days of no yellow lines it wasn't a problem. I recall parking restrictions coming into force, it started with parking being alternated from one side to the other by way of road signs which would be manually changed by way of a long pole. Signs around the town sprang up during the time of TB stating 'The children do not spit' these signs appeared on lamp posts. Policemen could regularly be heard at night patrolling the High Street, trying the doors of each shop as they passed! Today one wouldn't be able to hear such noises with our background sounds even if the Police had the time to execute such time consuming checks. This was a time of pub lock-ins, drinking had to stop by 10.30PM with 10 minutes drinking up time, I heard stories of pub customers sitting in a darkened Royal Oak (better known locally as the Drum & Monkey) keeping quiet until Bert Island (the local bobby) moved on to his next target! I wasn't born until 1952 but even I took part in one of these 'lock-ins' so it continued way into the era of this photograph.

Shared on 30 October 2007 by Mick Austin.

The Red Lion Isham

We bought our house in 1968, it is almost opposite the Red Lion. The landlord at the time was Mr. Fred Nobles who was my wife's uncle, and we believe he had been landlord from about 1955. The pub still had an orchard at that time with Gents toilets "up the yard". One of the most talked about clients was the Lion from Wellingborough Zoo who visted the pub and stood with his front paws on the bar while partaking of some liquid refreshment. Fred continued as landlord until I think 1978, when the pub was taken over by Mr. P. Stanbrook.
Mrs. Hilda Cheney was still living with her husband Jack in Langton Place, and every washday would walk across the A 509 and hang her washing out on a line on the Motar Pits which was common land.

Shared on 31 August 2008 by Nigel Stokes.

The Old Red Lion

I was born in the above pub in  1940. My grandmother Mary Jane Abbot used to run it and there was an old skittle alley in the bar. I was born in the room above it. The pub used to have an old rose garden, an orchard and a small car park, a pet pig [Sally] and I used to help pull the pints aged 3 in the bar. There was an old boy called "Champ" who used to tease me all the time, telling me "You've got your Mam's ribbon on" or some such nonsense. Another esteemed customer was a Mr Fort. My uncle Colin was a fine jazz piano player  and played in the pub [where he lived with Mary Jane] until he married in about 1950. The rose garden and the skittle alley have gone now. I used to play in the fields of corn, and we spent Christmas there most years when I was a child. I adored it all and still miss it. A lady who worked for my Nan was Hilda Cheyney; I used to call her "Neney". She entertained the visiting vicar or preacher every Sunday. [She was chapel but we were Church] and if I was very good she let me climb into the corner cupboard and get the sweet jar out!The turkey was baked in the ancient bakers oven over the road. The baker used to let many of the villagers use it then. My cousin and her family still lives nearby in Wellingborough and other cousins live in Kettering. My family name was Watson and if anyone remembers my Mum Eileen Abbott or her husband Chris Watson, please get in touch.

Shared on 24 March 2008 by Jayne Gilbert.

Life in Wellingborough after the war

My family moved to 121 Midland Road during the winter of 1946 as my father worked in a local paint factory till 1948. There was a huge monkey puzzle tree in the front garden. I was 7 and my sister was 10. We loved that house. We used to belong to the Boots Booklovers library in the town and were allowed to go and change our books on our own. I remember going to the Wellingborough Zoo for special occasions and can still see the polar bear walking to and fro along his cage. We used to collect conkers from the park near our house and give them to our dad for his work, as they needed them to extract the oil for their paint. Our milk was delivered on a horse and cart and poured into jugs at the front door. We kept it in the pantry during the winter and scalded it in the summer, which gave a thick creamy crust for our cornflakes. We had brought a lot of bottled fruit, vegetables jams and pickles with us from our home in Lancashire as well as eggs preserved in isinglass from our hens. Bread, meat and fish were delivered to the door in those days. Our neighbours kept a pig in the back garden near their tennis court, and we used to scratch its back and talk to it with my friend Angela who lived there. Then one day the pig disappeared and the kitchen was full of pork joints! We even tasted some of the bacon - a treat during a time of severe rationing. My sister and I used to travel to school on the bus to the Convent School in Kettering every day and we sat upstairs on one of the long bench seats after climbing the steep step from the passageway. That winter was the heaviest snowfall in recent memory and the snow was piled along the road for many weeks. We used to go sledging in the park but it was too cold to stay for long. Our house was kept warm by a coal fire and an Aladdin heater in the hallway. There was an old stove in the kitchen and there were gas heaters above the sink and the bath to heat the water. Coal was scarce, but we managed somehow. We used to walk everywhere or go by bus in those days and occasionally we went on the train to see my grandparents in London.

Shared on 16 February 2010 by Angela Diamond.

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