Loughborough, Pinfold Gate c.1965
Photo ref: L197104
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Photo ref: L197104
Photo of Loughborough, Pinfold Gate c.1965

More about this scene

Cars remained a relative luxury in the 1930s and most people either travelled by public transport or used a bicycle. Cycling became a very popular way for many people to leave the workaday world behind and go out into the countryside. Reid's offered a wide choice at modest and affordable prices. The changes did not, fortunately, lead to a bland uniformity in the way in which the town appeared. Denhams the jewellers has retained its flamboyant, Byzantine-style mosaics. Changing the face of the town was not always done with sensitivity for the surroundings. The High Street building now partly occupied by Argos and Barnado's was designed in the 1960s as a Co-Operative department store. Its stark, rather brutalist concrete shape now proclaims the modern architecture of its time. The shops themselves were changing. Some retained a traditional aspect. 'Johnny' Marrs was a Loughborough institution. The shop, with a wonderful period frontage right to the last, was the pawnbrokers, where local people could 'pop' or pawn anything of value to raise a little hard-needed cash. So far as is known, no one ever tried to 'pop' a weasel but Mr Marr, who was Mayor of Loughborough three times, would no doubt at least have considered its worth. Multiple stores entered the town in the shape of Woolworths. Originally, nothing in Woolworths' stores cost more than 6d (2.5p). It is evidence of the town's growth that a chain store should have come here so early in its own development.

A Selection of Memories from Loughborough

For many years now, we've been inviting visitors to our website to add their own memories to share their experiences of life as it was, prompted by the photographs in our archive. Here are some from Loughborough

Sparked a Memory for you?

If this has sparked a memory, why not share it here?

My father would take me to watch the Brush football team play at home matches, one of my relatives played for them; his name was Stan Hodges. The ground was behind the Queens Park, I remember a narrow foot to the entrance where it opened out, near the turnstile to get into the ground. Years later it was closed and a leisure centre was put in its place.
This was a wonderful delicatessen (although it would have described itself as "general provisions" or something like that, It had huge cheeses and whole sides of smoked pork and giant hams in the window. It had a unique smell - a mixture of spices, coffee, smoked meat and cheese. NO modern deli comes anywhere near it - apart possibly from Volpetti in Testaccio, Rome.
In my final year at Mountfields we were led up to the swimming baths in a long crocodile to be taught how to swim, if we couldn't already. I'd just about learnt to swim the previous summer holiday in Wales, but it felt much easier (& a lot warmer) in the swimming pool. The changing areas were quite primitive. Some of us used to go swimming here on Wednesday afternoon when I was at Loughborough Grammar School (when we worked Saturday mornings, but not Wednesday afternoons).
Clemersons was a great toy and model shop. I used to go in the 60s upstairs to their model section.