w-aussie
perth w.a.
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Mon 14th Nov 2016 12:11pm
On 27th Jul 2011 4:40pm, Dreamtime said:
I remember as a child after the war, there was a temporary restaurant built in Gosford Park, it was called The British Restaurant, and from what my mother told me it catered for cheaper meals. I vaguely remember a marquee type of building. It was at the top end of the park and I loved the jam tart and custard.
It must have been erected to cater for all those who no longer had a place to eat because of the bombing in the city. I hope someone remembers it as I am beginning to feel quite ancient!!!!!
I remember the same one, Gosford Rd. baths on the left & the restaurant on the left just after the railway bridge going towards town. If you was sitting on the top deck of a bus you always ducked when going under! Was this built from the dreaded asbestos? What about the steakhouse just off Ford? St. If you could eat 2 of their mixed grills you got them for free
john dearsley
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mickw
nuneaton
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Mon 14th Nov 2016 1:35pm
Did that building end up as The Arcadia snooker hall? |
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NeilsYard
Coventry
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Thu 24th Nov 2016 11:12pm
As there's been talk of the Godiva Cafe on this thread, Jordan Well?
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dutchman
Spon End
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Fri 25th Nov 2016 12:18am
Yes it is Neil
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NeilsYard
Coventry
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Fri 25th Nov 2016 12:58am
Whereabouts was that bit Dutchman? |
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dutchman
Spon End
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Fri 25th Nov 2016 4:01am
Just above the Gaumont Neil. The picture was taken in the mid to late 1960s as the second hand shop is occupying the extreme left of the frame. It's front window featured mainly air rifles and model aeroplane engines. The shop on the extreme right sold some unusual toys including a boxed set of toy soldiers featuring a representation of the ruins of Tobruk and a die cast German armoured car.
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Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
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367 of 519
Fri 25th Nov 2016 2:48pm
Before they were called British Restaurants, weren't they called 'Communal feeding centre' |
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dutchman
Spon End
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Fri 25th Nov 2016 3:02pm
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Helen F
Warrington
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Fri 25th Nov 2016 6:06pm
Neil, the building on the right of your photo is the one on the left of this painting -
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NeilsYard
Coventry
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370 of 519
Sat 26th Nov 2016 12:31am
Thanks Helen - I think you've posted that one before. I'm still struggling to locate whereabouts they were in relation to the whole road - which side etc.
There are not many images of Jordan Well post-war and before the Herbert/Poly/Uni developments went up. |
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dutchman
Spon End
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Sat 26th Nov 2016 12:57am
Does this help?
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Helen F
Warrington
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Sat 26th Nov 2016 9:26am
Sorry Neil, the city is very confusing and I forget it sometimes. Tip - one of the best ways to know the city is by its pubs. Partly because they're often marked on the maps, partly because Real Ale Rambles often lists a street number for them, and partly because quite a few of them survived the war to be captured in the Britain From Above like the excellent one posted by the Dutchman above. The post war aerial photos are very useful because they thin the number of buildings down. Not to mention they are much crisper images. The gaps on one side of roads allow views of the other side that were obscured in earlier photos. It's easier to see individual buildings and get a feel for how they looked and where on the street they were. Then you can look at older aerial shots and locate the ones you already know and/or rule certain positions out. There are still bits of the city unknown but it reduces the mystery.
I wish when I'd started, that I'd known about Britain From Above and that when you log in, you can zoom. I also find it useful to use CTRL + to zoom the screen view even further. CTRL - to zoom out again. |
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Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
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Sat 26th Nov 2016 3:41pm
dutchman, didn't all those buildings get bombed, I seem to think the cinema stood back a few yards, and a mesh fence ran all the way up to Jordan Well, there was little pavement, inside the fence was a great advert hoarding about ten foot high during the fifties
I seem to recall. |
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dutchman
Spon End
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Sat 26th Nov 2016 9:15pm
That picture was taken in 1953 Kaga and all the buildings on the Gaumont side were still there when I left the area in 1967.
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Roger T
Torksey
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Sat 26th Nov 2016 9:44pm
On 23rd Oct 2016 1:37am, dutchman said:
The tiny cube-shaped building in the centre of this 1949 aerial view is the Casino Snack Bar in Fleet Street:
It can also just be glimpsed nestling between the tall buildings either side in this picture posted earlier by NeilsYard:
The upper picture - I think I have spotted another clock - on the building just astern of and above the bus being hidden by a lamp standard.
I think it marked the office of the magazine "The Aurocar"
My wife "temped" for a while for the owner/manager/editor (?) for a while in the 60`s - something like Mr. Delisle (can`t quite remember it)
Anybody any ideas?
Edit: would it be Iliffe? |
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