Stroud Green in 1945

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Comments

  • edited 11:54PM
    Busby, don't be put off by smart-arse comments. We love this thread. Keep it coming.

    Here's a question - do you have any recollections of Stroud Green pubs in the post war years? Or were you too young to go in them when you lived here? Did your dad use them? Did women go into pubs then?

    There are a few on this board who should relate to that.
  • edited 11:54PM
    I'm with David, it's all about balance...
  • edited August 2009
  • edited 11:54PM
    There was nothing smart-arse about disagreeing with Busby's vision of the present. It's simply wrong.
  • edited August 2009
    I think David and Busby are both making valid points. And I think everyone is really keen to read more of your contributions Busby. I know I am. In particular, I was wondering if you'd ever heard of a shop called The Old Tuck Shop. I think it was on Florence Road?
  • edited 11:54PM
    All I'm doing is telling you all how it was in the 40s, if you want to argue then argue amongst yourselves.

    Well, DonnaW, the Tuck Shop was a favourite place for us schoolchildren. I've just looked into google street view and it is still recognisable.

    It's not in Florence Road but lies at the beginning of Woodstock Road.
    If you walk along Florence Road and cross Tollington Park towards Stroud Green School you'll see on the right (in google painted brown) a sort of shop. This was the Tuck Shop.

    A lot of the stuff; sweets, lollies, ice-lollies, sherbert, broken biscuits, etc., were available in quantities equal to one penny. (Id). If I rememebr rightly other things were priced at 3d and above. We weren't allowed to take anything into school - most of us had school dinners anyway. And, just to say, we all had a cumpulsory 1/3 of a pint of milk every schoolday morning. It was quite busy at 'rush hours' and was owned by Mr ...., (name known) who lived in Florence Road just opposite to me, and he also had a building and contracting business. Mr .... was the father of a good friend of mine, and, as he was someone who got on with things he had more money than all the other neighbours.

    His downfall was the attractive woman who served in the tuck shop in his employment.... and thereby hangs a tale.

    Unfortunately the school way along Florence Road wasn't always pleasant for me because I've always been afraid of dogs and the family on the corner of Tollington Park (Upper? I'm not sure now) had a large and rather viscious dog which they allowed to roam freely. If I was fortunate enough to see the dog before I approached the crossing i'd simply walk down to Victoria Road to avoid any stress.
  • edited 11:54PM
    I posted this on another forum, but I'm sure it will be of interest here too:

    Some fascinating 1940's aerial photography is available on www.getmapping.com , taken from RAF and Luftwaffe stock between 1939-1950.

    Type in N4 3JH as a postcode, and then switch to the "1940's hires" tab at the top of the map view area. You can see the area prior to heavy wartime bombing. That area was subsequently rebuilt to become Andover and Six Acres estates.
  • edited 11:54PM
    Busby, you haven't posted for a while.

    Do you have an answer to my question about recollections of Stroud Green pubs in the post war years - or were you too young to go in them? What about your family and neighbours - did they use them?

    Do you remember them from the outside or what they were called in thgose days?
  • edited 11:54PM
    Sorry, I missed your original question krappyrubsnif.

    We lived in Florence Road from 1945 -52/3. My dad was a teetotaller because he'd seen the state his father and therefore the whole family was in because of drink.So it's clear we had nothing to do with pubs.

    But don't forget a couple of things: Pubs weren't the same sort of social centres they tend to be today - that is most of those who drank did so at the expense of their families as there was hardly any money around anyway. Children weren't allowed into pubs, so it was common to see them sitting outside on the pavement or playing games. Naturally there were those 'better' pubs, but at that time there was nothing like that in SG. I think the most famous pubs around were the 'Spaniard's Inn' and 'Jack Straw's Castle' both up at Hampstead.
    Nor, as far as I can remember were there many pubs to be seen in SG. There was the one on the corner of SGRoad and Tollington Park (name forgotten), and the 'Silver Bullet' down beyond FP station. I think there was also one at the junction of SGRoad, Hanley Road and Stapleton Hall Road.

    In fact I think it's fair to say that pubs were looked upon as dens of iniquity and stank of beer. Most pubs (as I later got to know) sold a cheap beer which was the collected rests of spillages and probably not finished glasses. This was quite common I know, because for a while I worked a couple of turns in pubs as an 18year-old to get a bit of money.

    Compared to today beer bottles were never to be seen smashed on the pavements - all bottles had a deposit, even for soft drinks, and any left lying around were quickly taken back to a source by us children.

    Clearly, as a child I didn't interest myself in pubs, but know, from recent experience how pubs today have dropped in standards if I think back to the 60s when I started to go into them myself. In October I 'dropped' into a pub in Finchley, it was a still warm october day and I was looking forward to a thirst-quencher. . . but I quickly left - all the swearing was unbelievable.

    I cannot remember if any of our neighbours used them. but I don't think so simply because there really was no money around and the neighbours, still in the grip of the war years had to scrape every penny together to live. In general, as I remember, everybody around were 'decent' caring people who were forced to start again after the war ended. I'm pretty sure that all of us children had happy lives, my time at SGSchool was never darkened by anything, I don't know if many can say that today.
  • AliAli
    edited 11:54PM
    From the other post it sounds like the BlackStock is still stuck at 1945 !
  • AliAli
    edited July 2014
    Idoru,<br><br>This  a great  set of posts from Busby I found to bring back into circulation as they where so good<br>
  • AliAli
    edited July 2014
    your best to start on page 1<br>
  • Thanks Ali.  Glad I turned off the 'kill discussions older than 01/01/2011' function.  I will add this to the 'best of SG.org' links.
  • This thread is so cool!
  • edited January 2018
  • edited July 2014
    @Gardener-Joe - do you have any pictures of that?  Of all then old pics I've seen, very few are from the SGR, and those that are have all been of the top end by the Dairy/Stapleton.  I'd especially like to see what the SGR/Tollington crossroads looked like before the bomb.
  • @Arkardy - who bombed SGR? WW2?
  • Busbys post of June 2009 wil tell you about the water tank at the corner of TP and SGR<br>
  • edited January 2016
  • Ah, those are just wonderful. Thanks so much Joe. Is 1305 taken from the SGR/Tollington junction?
  • @gardener-joe.. Thanks for these they are wonderful. I like 47 which shows the church in Tollington Park. things have not changed very much in the last 100 years
  • I came across this interesting life story earlier

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/03/a4475603.shtml

    I wonder what happened to Busby ?
  • Meant to say to the new folks read the whole discussion you will learn much about where we live
  • Thanks Ali, will give that a read
  • I see theres some mention of bomb sites, and a link to an old map. Not sure if this better version is posted

    http://bombsight.org/?#15/51.5688/-0.1107
  • If you zoom out it is amazing !
  • My front porch was cracked by one of these bombs that fell across the street. It wasnt repaired until the mid 1990s.
  • Reading all the old posts is pretty sobering and it's a remind about how much we lost in two wars - my Grandma's lived in occupied Europe and I wish I had asked her more questions now.
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