Birkenhead In The 1950s

A Memory of Birkenhead.


Birkenhead in the 1950s – it bears no resemblance to how it is today – it does’nt even look the same. Most of the places I remember are gone. The streets where I grew up have gone – the geography of the place has changed – I could not even pinpoint where my old house was in Sun Street.. The church where I was confirmed and married has gone but the memories of Mr Davies, the Vicar, still remain. My secondary school is still there – but no longer operates as a school. Birkenhead Park has changed – what happened to the band stand, the Blind Garden, the long green houses in the Top Park. The rocks are still there though. Its funny how they don’t look so steep anymore. Exmouth Street shops thrived. Joneses the fish shop, O’Kells where just about everybody bought something, from stockings to baby clothes. I well remember a portly “Mr O’Kell” sitting in his little booth collecting the money with his wife quietly overseeing the staff. Rogers the Bike Shop with its smell of rubber tyres. Stan the Butcher. The Lord Exmouth Pub. Mrs Franks lucky dip shop. Lunts cake shop. The Echo Milk Bar with its cups of frothy coffee. Marriots Scrap Yard – a wonder to behold – we used to love going in there and looking around, though we never bought anything. The Pawn Shop. Then there was Hardings Coaches with its little miniature charabanc that would tour the streets to advertise their trips. The many cinemas – all gone now. The Gaumont, scene of my first date with the man I later married and where many years before I was taken to see Davy Crocket “in person”. The Ritz where sometimes the queues were endless. The Essoldo. The Empire. The Plaza. We kids played out. From dawn to dusk most days. I don’t think our mums worried. We played out, got dirty, plenty of fresh air and went to bed tired. We played kick the can, rounders, two balls, catch the girl kiss the girl, hide and seek. On 1st May our mums dressed us up in old curtains and we paraded the streets as May Queens. We rode bikes – sometimes going quite far afield. We had a youth club – St Matthews Youth Club in Bentink Street. The Brownies operated from there as well. Then there was the community spirit. The neighbours all looked out for one another. They organised trips for themselves and outings for us kids. We went “en masse” during the summer, on the train to Hoylake. The mums all sat in a circle with the deck chairs, flasks, ciggies and packed lunches. Us kids played on the sand, swam in the baths, went cockling, collected empty pop bottles and took them back to the little kiosk for the “money back”. We begged our mums for pennies to go on the boating lake – but they said it was either the boating lake or the baths. So we paid to go on the boating lake and bunked into the baths. Nobody had much money. We mostly had jam on our butties and sometimes just stuffing! Us kids drank water and the mums got boiling water from the kiosk for their tea. Babies were born at home, usually in the front room. Babies were left outside houses and shops in their prams. Nobody went to a nursery. We started school at five and until then stayed with our mums or grannies. No telly. I remember one of our neighbours getting their first telly from Radio Rentals just before the Queen’s coronation, and all the mums and kids in the street piled into their house to watch. We had a street party. I had a special white dress made edged with red white and blue. Our front window was decorated with streamers and flags and the whole street looked great. We had a big gang of kids in our road. We went everywhere together. When we were old enough to have bikes we cycled for miles. Once we got as far as Chester. My mum could not believe it. We must have been about 11 or 12. We would roam Bidston Hill and hide in the heather. The boys played footie in Birkenhead Park and the girls would hang about until it was over. We went to Arrowe Park – where I once lost a library book and was terrified to tell my Dad because he would have to pay a fine. We had little corner shops. Nelly Eggies, Richmonds, Ainsworths, the Dairy. For really special occasions there was Stubbs Bakery in Grange Road West. The smell alone could drive you crazy. Hursts Bakery in Claughton Road had the best bread in Birkenhead. The epi centre of the town was Grange Road. Everybody went to Grange Road. Saturday was the day for Grange Road. We could spend our pocket money in Woolworths. My mum would have a cup of tea in Oliveri’s then we would walk down Grange Road, looking longingly in the posh Allinsons shop windows, then walking up past the Dolls Hospital with all its little broken dolls in the window – and on to the market. The old market that is. The atmosphere, the smells, the characters – I remember them so well. The country stalls where we would buy our eggs. The devine smell in the country stalls of cooked hams, fruit and veg. Eli who stood in the corner selling all kinds of everything pulled from cardboard boxes – shouting to his customers who would sometimes stand for hours to see what came out of those boxes. Then there was the man from Africa who sold chamis leathers. Nothing else, just chamis leathers. No supermarkets then. My mum did her shopping in the local Co-op – I can still remember her divvie number – 81943. I can see her now – walking up Bentink Street with a heavy bag of shopping that would last us for the week. You just went to the counter in the Co-op and told the man in the white coat what you wanted. He knew everyone by name. He served sugar in blue bags and cut pats of butter from a block. When money was tight at the end of the week you could buy six cracked eggs from the dairy in Conway Street and on really good days you could get some pennies for a strange concoction of soft drink from Bob Martins that sometimes made your wee turn a strange colour. Stationery and school stuff could be bought from The Wesley Press – but only if you were particularly flush otherwise it came from Woollies. Its all gone now but the memories remain. We had freedom, we had fun, we had mums who did’nt go out to work, there was a sense of community though that’s not what it was called then – it was just called “being neighbourly”. Some folks may say that kids of today have got it all. Well they have’nt. We did. JM.


Added 08 July 2014

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Comments & Feedback

my name is andrew walker and lived in no 6 sun street with my brother brian what a memory you have brought back some great times we had down i will try to post up some of my times we had in sun street
What lovely memories really enjoy reading . I lived in Camden street and had so much freedom to play and go places unsupervised it was wonderful
Only just found this page after looking for something else. I was born in Crown Street and reading the above brought back so many memories.
Hi, what a faboulous recollection of names and locations ! l lived at 26 Sun street until I left and enlisted into the military in 1967. It must be age as I can remember Bob Martins and his lovely Blood Tonic, Nelly Heggies and asking for 2 slices of Prem but not where I l left my glasses 10 minutes ago ! I went to 'Trinny and then on to 'Hemmy'. My upbringing was not easy and I contributed very much to the 'gloss' on the benches of Bains Hockshop. Having served all over the world and now living in sleepy Suffolk, there is only 1 place that I want to spend my 70th birthday this June and it's Birkenhead. (Hotel booked !) and have a good stroll down memory lane. Del Amos (sister Pat, brother John both deceased)
I lived at No. 40 ... which was on the same side as Nellies. I have had my 70th .. now heading for 72 .... how can that be? I had a brother Peter. And I married a "Hemmy" boy .... still together 51 years later! Now happilly enjoying our retirement! Enjoy "Memory Lane" in June .... but its not the same now!
Hi, thanks for your feedback. Good to know that there are still people still around from that neck of the woods with the same recollections as myself. I am aware that the area bears no resemblance to (our day) streets, shops, etc, but am prepared to do a lot visualising ! Your name I am sorry to say does'nt ring a bell with me. I really can identify with the establisments you have mentioned as if it was yesterday. It certainly was special in its own unique way. To see 'coolies' en route to their ships down Exmouth street with a block of salt tied to the handlebar of their newly purchased second hand bike was a sight to behold. There is so much more as I am sure you would agree. Best WIshes to you both,
Del Amos
This is wonderful. Of all the tactile things you write I recall Eli, yes the wonderful old market stalls, one at least, from Malpas. Rogers, where there was a small church, still has the rubber tyre smell in my nostrils. Thank you - all quite remarkable. Are you old enough to remember the Roxy near Charing Cross? Dr Terence Clifford-Amos - born in Farm Road Tranmere.
Yes I remember the Roxy. All those cinemas in Birkenhead ... all now gone. What a terrible shame they pulled down the Art Deco looking Ritz. Nobody cares now. Birkenhead is a shadow of its former self. We dont go there anymore. M&S has gone, Beatties is hanging on by a thread. Half the stalls in the market have gone. At least we have our memories of a better time and place. I often wonder what my mother would think of it all today!
I was born at number 40 in 1948 but we moved away when I was 13 months old. My grandparents lived there but I don’t know if they owned the house or rented.
What an interesting site which brings back lots of memories, mostly happy.
I was born at 40 Sun Street in January 1951 and lived there with my sister, Jean and our parents, sadly our mother died in 1958 and I spent most of my time with my aunts in Keightley Street, and then in 1961 my father bought a house in Bebington and we moved there.
I still have fond memories of a Sun Street childhood and remember vividly some of the neighbours who were so kind when our mum died. There was Mrs Gittins across from us, she was in the Salvation Army and her son used to play the guitar on the front step, I remember they kept a tortoise in the back yard. Mrs Dear would give me sixpence for running errands for her, and then there was poor old crippled Olga who lived next door.
Around the corner in Hilton Street I remember old Pricey who had a couple of dilapidated 3 storey houses, he was a bit of a bogeyman and the kids were frightened of him! And there were two spinster sisters the Misses Milner who ran the Brougham Mission...
I attended Trinity Street school and then the Birkenhead Institute and in 1972 moved to London where I still live. A couple of years ago I visited Birkenhead and could barely recognise the place, it seemed strangely quiet and deserted. I walked up from Woodside, around an empty Hamilton Square, along a deserted Cleveland Street and on to a once bustling and lively Conway Street where I tried and failed to find the spot where I once lived and played. Bentinck Street which once boasted a shop or a pub on each corner of the terraced streets off it was now an unkempt litter strewn grassy area with little boxy modern houses from which unfriendly looking locals viewed me with suspicion.
How times change...
Mrs Dear would of been my cousin. I'm part of the Rhodes/Ledsham family.
Hi Peter Hodgson
And everyone else here 👋 I have been trying to find any photos from Trinity Street school same time( Years) As you mentioned in your wonderful memories.
My query is Anybody remember my mum her name is Rita also known as Millie, she went to Trinity Street school, Hamilton secondary school, to hopefully ask you wonderful people' who are sharing fantastic history,
Apologies guys
I clicked the wrong button..... Question about Trinity Street school... My mum name is Rita and she was known as Millie because she looked like the singer who sang "my girl lollypop" she also attended Hamilton secondary school....
Did Rita have a sister ? Did they live near to Park Station. Let me know her sisters name. If it is the same Rita, I have a photo somewhere of us all. Regards Jean

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