Dreamtime
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181 of 253
Wed 30th Apr 2014 6:52pm
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Wearethemods
Aberdeenshire
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182 of 253
Thu 1st May 2014 7:49am
From looking at MR's photos it would appear that the rear part of the building (with the top shops) was completely demolished and has been rebuilt as single units. Were the original bricks reused or any of the old building retained ?
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Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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Catshed
Old Chapelfields
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183 of 253
Thu 1st May 2014 6:46pm
On 30th Apr 2014 5:53pm, Midland Red said:
Hair! It was a barber's shop
Yep it was a Barber's shop at the front and as he got more ill the lady's in the back used to cut my hair,his 'male' side was on the right as you went in and you went down a corridor on the left to the lady's salon,i remember there was a whole wall covered in local photo's from this area as I sat having my hair cut by a lady, don't know what happened to them all,Mr Stanton was the man that cut my long hair off in the early 90's in an act to make me look more respectable for my sisters wedding.....i don't think it worked though as I still look like a tramp
Triumph - 'The Best Motorcycle in the World'.
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Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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tiktok
Sheffield
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184 of 253
Mon 18th Aug 2014 4:50pm
Hi, I'm new to this forum. I'm researching my family and came across this site because they are mentioned on page 5. They are the Prescott family originally of Clerkenwell but then Coventry (where the family stayed until the present day).
I have a 2 generations of watchmakers starting with William Henry Prescott watchmaker who appears to have lived at 4 and 62 Hearsall Lane and his sons:
John - Watch Finisher
William Henry - Case Springer
George - Motion maker
James - Watch Jeweller.
They later moved to (the court house?) Spon Street.
It could be that they all worked in a factory but it seems like they had enough skills between them to be independent. I need to find records where I can put some meat on the bones ? Does anyone have any ideas?
I no longer live in Coventry but I assume the houses don't exist any more.
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Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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dutchman
Spon End
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Mon 18th Aug 2014 9:23pm
Hello TikTok and welcome to Rob's forum
William Henry's address would have been on the corner at 62 Spon End and 4 Hearsall Cottages (seen on the right here). The cottages were already condemned when this picture was taken in the 1930s and replaced by a parade of shops in the 1950s.
The three-storey Court House in Spon Street (seen on the left here) was replaced only recently with a modern two-storey outhouse which bears no resemblance to the original.
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Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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tiktok
Sheffield
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186 of 253
Tue 19th Aug 2014 3:32pm
Thank you so much for this. I'm sure my Grandmother will remember this as it was. I plan on a trip to the watch museum but I'm waiting for them to respond to a mail about records they may have. Failing that I'm not sure.
I assume the courthouse wasn't a court. It looks too big for a single family so I guess they rented a room or 2.
Again many thanks. |
Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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dutchman
Spon End
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187 of 253
Tue 19th Aug 2014 3:52pm
The top-floor was a workshop, hence the extra windows. The family would have lived on the lower two floors. This was a very common arrangement in Coventry.
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Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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pixrobin
Canley
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188 of 253
Tue 19th Aug 2014 5:53pm
I think that what is not appreciated by many is that the house is only one room deep. I have the same misunderstanding of my property. Because it is double fronted many believe I live in a luxury house - yet it is the same size as all the others in the terrace but with the door and windows on the side.
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Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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Banksy
Bradford
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189 of 253
Sat 30th Jan 2016 1:02pm
Hi, I am looking for some information regarding a thickness gauge I have. It states on the dial 'Rotherham's Coventry, thickness gauge, Legge Brothers (Export) Ltd. Made in England'. It measures a thousandth of an inch. Any information would be nice. Was it used to measure metal thickness in the manufacturing of watches, or was it made by Rotherham's?
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Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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Norman Conquest
Allesley
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190 of 253
Sat 30th Jan 2016 1:31pm
It was probably made by Rotherham's and used by tool room workers and the like for measuring. Is it like a modern clock gauge or similar to the older open micrometers. I have a mike with a 12inch jaw that will measure down to one thou'.
Although most of my working life was as ambulance crew I enjoyed making things on my small lathe in the shed. Would buy brass bar ends from Price's scrap yard and somehow totally ruin them while trying to make cannons etc. After saying that I don't think I have any measuring tools made by Rotherham's.
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Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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JRL
Binley Woods
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191 of 253
Sat 30th Jan 2016 6:55pm
The item you refer to sounds as though you have a Rotherham's Paper Thickness Gauge. We designed and made it from November 1950. It would be 3.2" overall length, 2.3" diameter and 0.85" deep from base to bezel top. There is an operating button on the side and a slot where the paper is inserted in the narrow end. Does that match what you have?
I did the drawings for it. I would be interested in a photograph of it, as I haven't seen one since leaving Rotherham's in 1956. I am also associated with Coventry Watch Museum and we don't have one. I am also trying to find someone who has a Rotherham's Pigeon Clock to photograph, another of their products which I was involved with. |
Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
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192 of 253
Sat 30th Jan 2016 7:09pm
Hello & welcome Banksy & JRL to our forum
Thank you for your posts |
Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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Frances
Kenilworth
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193 of 253
Thu 23rd Feb 2017 4:02pm
Hi.
Can anyone possibly tell me what a watch cap maker is please? Also as I understand it, while women helped in the Coventry ribbon weaving industry there were not women in the watch making industry. Is that correct?
Many thanks
Frances
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Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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Midland Red
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194 of 253
Thu 23rd Feb 2017 4:12pm
Watch Cap Maker: made the internal movement cover of a watch.
(from Dictionary of Old Occupations) |
Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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Frances
Kenilworth
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195 of 253
Sat 25th Feb 2017 9:32am
Many thanks, - Google strangely did not help.
Can I assume from the type of work that it was quite a specialised occupation and caused strain on the eyes?
With very best wishes
Frances xxx
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Industry, Business and Work -
Watch and Clock Industry in Coventry
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