NeilsYard
Coventry |
181 of 220
Wed 11th Dec 2019 11:56am
Does anyone know the exact date the original Coventry Owen Owen store opened? |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
Annewiggy
Tamworth |
182 of 220
Wed 11th Dec 2019 12:27pm
Friday September 17th 1937 at 11.00am!!
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Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
183 of 220
Thu 12th Dec 2019 12:12pm
Annewiggy.
Brilliant, but what a statement - the store opened in wartime then, not before as thought. This would have different effects. First, a week after the blackout started, we felt the full impact on how it was to alter our lives, car accidents doubled, minor injuries were huge.
The huge staff leaving in the dark would be a nightmare. Although rationing hadn't started people were buying and hoarding. Word went round that clothing factories had turned to uniforms - a quarter of the population was in some uniform or other, and clothes would be hard to buy. A big spending spree for people that had money before they sold out.
The 'dark days' in more ways than one. |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
184 of 220
Thu 12th Dec 2019 12:58pm
Kaga.
Not to mention all the knitting that was undone only to be used again for another item. My gran was an expert at that (crinkly balls of wool). |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
Annewiggy
Tamworth |
185 of 220
Thu 12th Dec 2019 1:45pm
Sorry Kaga, I thought I had edited that, it should read 1937. Senior moment. |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
Greg
Coventry |
186 of 220
Fri 13th Dec 2019 7:56pm
On 4th Oct 2012 6:06pm, dutchman said:
No, they were based in Liverpool.
Owen Owen was the son of a North Wales sheep farmer, I believe. |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
stuarthelenmillar
Radford |
187 of 220
Sat 14th Dec 2019 9:06pm
Fabulous photo, what year would this be, Greg?
Question |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
Helen F
Warrington |
188 of 220
Sat 14th Dec 2019 10:06pm
Hi, I could be wrong but I assume that Greg's photo was the same date as Midland Red's, give or take a few months - so 1937? |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
189 of 220
Sun 15th Dec 2019 10:59am
Midland Red's photo is the only one of the first Owens, but note it was all barrow and elbow grease even late thirties - opened in 1937.
I believe that they wanted to open on the day the first woman flew solo from UK to USA but they got delayed and she flew in 1936. |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
PeterB
Mount Nod |
190 of 220
Tue 28th Jul 2020 10:21pm
A new hole has been opened up on Trinity Street next to Primark. The brickwork looks like it could be from the original Owen Owen building.
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Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
Helen F
Warrington |
191 of 220
Tue 28th Jul 2020 10:38pm
It looks about right for Owen Owens. About halfway between Ironmonger Row and the pointy Broadgate end. If it was earlier brickwork it would be on Little Butcher Row. Do the bricks have a frog? What period did they come in? |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
PeterB
Mount Nod |
192 of 220
Wed 29th Jul 2020 12:38am
Hi Helen,
I've zoomed into the photo and I don't think there is a frog, but most bricks have a layer of rubble on them so its hard to tell. Frogs came in c1850.
The brickwork style looks like Common or American Bond. It looks similar to the brickwork in the second photo in 27 old photos of Coventry's much-loved Owen Owen store in Broadgate.
Peter.
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Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
193 of 220
Wed 29th Jul 2020 8:29am
Why wouldn't it have been part of Owen Owen's basement in 1937?
In fact why not the basement in Neil's photo in post #178? |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
scrutiny
coventry |
194 of 220
Wed 29th Jul 2020 10:20am
Not all bricks had a frog in them, some had holes and others were still solid. When I built my first house in the early seventies all the bricks were solid, hell of a job to cut to length. |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen | |
Slim
Another Coventry kid |
195 of 220
Wed 29th Jul 2020 11:06am
That's right. I seem to remember the cheaper commons (light pink colour) having frogs, whereas the darker engineering bricks generally had 3 off 1" dia holes. I think the blues were solid. I'm going back to when I was a little boy and the builders were building a new garage because the old wooden one was rotten and falling down. |
Industry, Business and Work - Owen Owen |
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