Marlborough, Polly Tea Rooms c.1955
Photo ref: M34103
Made in Britain logo

Photo ref: M34103
Photo of Marlborough, Polly Tea Rooms c.1955

More about this scene

This Georgian building, photographed before it was partly destroyed by fire in 1966, houses the Polly Tea Rooms, which were established in 1928. The first and second floors on the left have been removed, leaving the ground floor and right-hand part intact. In 1722 this building was the Half Moon pub, which shut in 1815. The late 18th-century building on the left has gone.

Memories of Marlborough, Polly Tea Rooms c1955

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. These memories are of Marlborough, Polly Tea Rooms c.1955

Sparked a Memory for you?

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

My husband and I were both born in Marlborough. My husband is Peter Long and I believe he went to Grammar School with Julian West whose family owned the tea rooms. We both remember the fire as it was the year we were married; and that afterwards the Mop Fairs held in October had to re-position itself to accommodate fire engine access should another fire happen. I worked in Rawlings and Phillips corn merchants on ...see more
A photo very similar to this hangs in my bedroom, I am a West and spent many a happy summers here. My family used to own the tearooms, my mother and her brother were caught in the fire in 1966 which resulted in the top two floors being burnt down. Me, my brother and sister visited only once a year as we live in County Durham up north, but this building means a huge amount to my mum and this picture of ...see more
Sent out of London during the Blitz with my mother, grandmother and sister, a visit to the Polly Tea Rooms was for special occasions only. We loved it when the parents of the boys from Marlborough School came to visit and brought their sons to Polly's for tea (even though we were only 5 or 6!). Happily, the tea rooms are still there, whilst the Merlin on the other side and at the other end of the High Street has disappeared.