Baz
Coventry |
1 of 228
Sat 2nd Jun 2012 12:39pm
Does anyone know what connection a beehive has to do with this building?
It's above a bank in the High Street as you go from Broadgate to the Council House.
Always looking forward to looking at the past.
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Streets and Roads - High Street | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
2 of 228
Sat 2nd Jun 2012 1:56pm
Looks like above the Halifax BS?
Google-Map'ed |
Streets and Roads - High Street | |
Baz
Coventry Thread starter
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3 of 228
Sat 2nd Jun 2012 8:27pm
Thanks NeilsYard, it is on the Halifax building. This artwork is only found on one corner of the buliding. It's hard to make out in this pic, but it shows a beehive. Just wonder what the connection is (if any). Always looking forward to looking at the past.
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Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
4 of 228
Sat 2nd Jun 2012 8:53pm
Hi Baz, clever of you to spot that. I am curious too to know - why the beehive?
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Baz
Coventry Thread starter
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5 of 228
Sat 2nd Jun 2012 9:15pm
Thanks all, I think I've sorted it.
Beehives are used to show a place of work (industry). They are not very common and only a few are noted on the internet.
Type "beehive crest" into your search engine and see. Always looking forward to looking at the past.
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dutchman
Spon End |
6 of 228
Sat 2nd Jun 2012 9:51pm
In this case it was the crest of original occupants Lloyds Bank before they adopted the Black Horse symbol.
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Baz
Coventry Thread starter
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7 of 228
Sat 2nd Jun 2012 9:56pm
And there's me thinking I had stumbled on a bit of history. Thanks Dutchman. Always looking forward to looking at the past.
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Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
8 of 228
Sun 3rd Jun 2012 4:25am
Now I know, thanks for that, most interesting.
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anne
coventry |
9 of 228
Sun 3rd Jun 2012 9:04am
Perhaps banks should now adopt fat cats as their symbols! |
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MisterD-Di
Sutton Coldfield |
10 of 228
Sun 3rd Jun 2012 11:41am
Or pigs with their snouts in the trough. |
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Rob Orland
Historic Coventry |
11 of 228
Sun 10th Jun 2012 8:00pm
Just for my own curiosity I've decided to resurrect a subject we talked about some time ago as a side-effect of the Allwoods topic.
The Allwoods, Atkins and Turton coffee shop at number 2 High Street eventually became Martins Bank (apostrophe left out to stay consistent with the bank's own spelling). However, there was some uncertainty about the age of the building, which was something I particularly wanted to find out. Two people - one member of this forum and a university researcher looking into our High Street - both independently found archival evidence that Martins Bank was built in 1937-38.
However, I've now discovered two photographs that appear to indicate that the same building occupied by Allwoods et al became, with a frontage update, Martins Bank.
The first photograph is a scan from David Fry and Albert Smith's "The Coventry We Lost", showing a 1913 photo. The building indicated, whilst still retaining the Allwoods shop frontage on the ground floor, looks remarkably like the Bank in Tony Swann's fine 1980s photograph below it.
The third photo was probably taken a little earlier, around the turn of the century, and clearly shows the Atkins and Turton shop sign above the arches, which, I believe, were the same ones again revealed on conversion to the bank around 1937.
So, it appears to me that it wasn't build new in 1937 - could it be that the archives simply record some building work being done before the bank conversion - or was an identical building put up in its place.... somehow I doubt that!
Any thoughts anyone? |
Streets and Roads - High Street | |
TonyS
Coventry |
12 of 228
Sun 10th Jun 2012 9:55pm
Looking closely at the windows in the first two photo's, the first floor windows in the older photo appear "taller" than the second floor windows - whereas in the 1980's photo, they are the same height. Also, the windows in the older photo appear to be much closer together.
The second and third images certainly look like they could be the same building. |
Streets and Roads - High Street | |
anne
coventry |
13 of 228
Sun 10th Jun 2012 10:10pm
Not sure - but think the 3rd photo is totally amazing - feels weird to see such a familar scene as it was at that time! |
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Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
14 of 228
Mon 11th Jun 2012 3:51am
They are great photos Rob.
Hi there Anne
Don't you just love to see how they used to display all their wares outside the shops in those days.
Especially the ironmonger shops. Don't know how we would manage with an old tin bath today!!
Back to the bank - from where I am sitting it looks like the original building lovingly restored to a bank. Just goes to show it can be done instead of pulling all the old solid buildings down (unless it has been bomb damaged of course).
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Streets and Roads - High Street | |
Rob Orland
Historic Coventry |
15 of 228
Mon 11th Jun 2012 8:44pm
On 10th Jun 2012 9:55pm, TonyS said:
Looking closely at the windows in the first two photo's, the first floor windows in the older photo appear "taller" than the second floor windows - whereas in the 1980's photo, they are the same height. Also, the windows in the older photo appear to be much closer together.
Mmmm, I'd not noticed the differing window height before, that's a good point. However, I think overall there are probably too many similarities for it to actually be a different building - maybe the windows were reworked in some way between times? Chronologically, the first photo is later than the third one. |
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