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Hillsborough Shops Of The Past


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MJM1962 - I looked in 1925 directory for Leppings Lane and, sure enough, your great-grandparents' shop is given there at No 78 "James William Reeve, boot repairer". Next door, on the corner of Eskdale Road, was "Charles Smith, grocer".

 

Thats fantastic, thanks for looking, I would love to find some photo's of that sort of area, but have never been able to.

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I only have one old photo of Leppings Lane, dating from around 1908 - here it is:

 

http://i169.photobucket.com/albums/u219/twigmore/LeppingsLane.jpg

 

This is looking towards Penistone Road; your great-grandparents' shop would have been just off the photo at the left side.

 

And here are two old photos of Hillsborough Corner:

 

http://i169.photobucket.com/albums/u219/twigmore/Hillsborough.jpg

 

The upper photo (looking towards Bradfield Road) dates from the early 1930s and shows Miss Wood's toy shop at the far left, then "G. Strutt & Co" wholesale grocers, and then Hemmines. A few years later, Joseph Hemmines purchase Strutt's property and expanded his business next door.

 

The lower photo, dating from shortly before the First World War, was taken looking towards Middlewood Road. William Bush's grocer's shop is the single-storey building at the right (later rebuilt as two storeys and housing Burtons, Greenwoods etc.) Bill Bush's grandson, Reginald P. Bush, later had a high-class grocer's shop further on Middlewood Road, on the corner of Keyworth Road - this business survived well into the 1970s. On the left of the photo is the "Hillsbro Inn" with Richard Snook given as the licensee. He must have recently taken over; in the early 1900s the licensee was Isaac Shires. In the middle of the photo you can just see part of the National School, which was demolished in the 1930s and was where Woolworths/Superdrug is now.

Edited by hillsbro
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Thanks for the photo's Hillsboro. I live at the other end of Sheffield now, but went to school at Marlcliffe and Wisewood, I spent a lot of time just hanging around, as you do at that age, so I never tire of looking at Hillsborough images, it takes me back to my youth.

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It's nice to know that the photos are appreciated! I have dozens of old photos and postcards of Hillsborough but many of them are quite "ordinary". But here is another old photo showing the Hillsbro Inn, this time with Isaac Shires as licensee. It’s a postcard produced by the local firm of Furness & Co, and has a 1906 postmark. I like the "human activity" in this photo - the groups of people at the left, eyeing the cameraman, one man with a clay pipe; more people at the right (plus a horse) and of course the tram in the middle with its smart, erect driver. A moment in time captured.

 

http://i169.photobucket.com/albums/u219/twigmore/Hillsborough2.jpg

 

And here is another photo of Middlewood Road, looking north-westerly. It isn’t dated but must also be early 1900s. Pearson’s shop is on the corner of Taplin Road, offering "Gilmour’s wines and spirits". Duncan Gilmour & Co was a local firm – at one time they had a brewery in Dixon Lane. One of their pubs in the Hillsborough area was the Hillsborough Hotel on Langsett Road. They also had the Beehive on West Street (later the Foundry & Firkin).

 

http://i169.photobucket.com/albums/u219/twigmore/Hillsborough3.jpg

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The Tarzan field is unknown to me, but I was never a Tarzan fan...;)

 

After the National School was demolished in the 1930s, the site of Woolworths was just waste land. Nowadays it would be a car park, but it was just a muddy square of land (after rainy weather the puddles were excellent for making mud pies) with a low wall at the front. The alleyway at the right-hand side, which I think was called Bradfield Place, led past the back of the Don Bakery (with its smelly milk churns) to a door in a wall, through which was the Blue Ball Inn. The first part of the alleyway is still there with its cobblestones.

 

Woolworths must have been built in c. 1959. The "grand opening" was announced with much publicity, and the first 100 customers (my mum was one) received a carrier bag full of tinned food etc. - it all had the "Kingsmere" trade-name which was Woolworth's "own brand" at the time.

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Thank you Hillsbro,I remember the alleyway now you have explained I think I just about remember the wall.

The Tarzan field was behind Manns fish shop,the kids from Rudyard Road used to play down there and walk under the bridge onto the wier when the river was low.

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  • 2 weeks later...

I remember the field behind Mann's, but didn't know it had a name. We also used to play there and walk under the bridge when the water level was low. At the other side of the bridge there was a flight of steps leading up the side of the weir. Sometimes we would go there in our lunch break from Malin Bridge School - at 1 o'clock the "hooter" would sound somewhere nearby (where was it?) which told us we had 20 minutes to get back to school. But in the school holidays, in dry weather you could paddle all the way to Malin Bridge, with or without your wellies..:)

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