Old Photos For No Reason Whatsoever

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Abbey Glen laundry, Coniston Road, off Abbeydale Road. May 1983.
Now defunct. The main block frontage has been retained as part of an apartment/housing development for the whole site.
I walked past it regularly as a kid and have never forgotten the distinctive noise and warm, humid, chemical smell.

Abbey Glen laundry Coniston Rd  May 1983.jpg
 
Abbey Glen laundry, Coniston Road, off Abbeydale Road. May 1983.
Now defunct. The main block frontage has been retained as part of an apartment/housing development for the whole site.
I walked past it regularly as a kid and have never forgotten the distinctive noise and warm, humid, chemical smell.

View attachment 88620
Great memories. Always lived in this area. I'd have been 15 then and for the 8 or so years before it we used to play for hours along the back of here on little London road, fishing, rope swing on the banking, bikes, skateboarding and football on the post office sorting depot after scaling the wall. Also many summer holidays spent footballing against the garages next to Smithywood rd WMC. Different times, happy days.
 
Abbey Glen laundry, Coniston Road, off Abbeydale Road. May 1983.
Now defunct. The main block frontage has been retained as part of an apartment/housing development for the whole site.
I walked past it regularly as a kid and have never forgotten the distinctive noise and warm, humid, chemical smell.

View attachment 88620
3rd car up from the lamp post, Dutton Sierra.
 
Great memories. Always lived in this area. I'd have been 15 then and for the 8 or so years before it we used to play for hours along the back of here on little London road, fishing, rope swing on the banking, bikes, skateboarding and football on the post office sorting depot after scaling the wall. Also many summer holidays spent footballing against the garages next to Smithywood rd WMC. Different times, happy days.
I'll be a few years longer in the tooth than you then CB, but I've very similar memories of that area.
I grew up just on the other side of Abbeydale Road, near Abbeydale school.The reason I walked past Abbey Glen so often was because the River Sheaf running along the back of T'Hardy Pick (as we called it) was my playground too. Our river patch covered from roughly Jack Clare's school of motoring on Rydal Road, to the gennel through Tyzacks across the river to Heeley baths.
Sticklebacking, tadpoleing, paddling, wading, damming, prospecting, and floating. Train spotting on the railway embankments and walls but never, never on the actual tracks.Wall -hopping across the backs of the house. Den building, scrapping. Endless footy on any scrap of land. Playing in the condemned house and buildings.
A daily warning from mum not to play in the river, but invariably returning home with wet and muddy shoes to a clip round round the ear...
No health and safety, no hygeine, no malice, no intentional damage or nuisance caused to anyone. Just endless fun.
 
Bert's first ever company vehicle in 1979 was a 1965 Humber Super Snipe.

Obviously , Bert would have been very much a young whippersnapper at the time and I am intrigued to learn how his employers came to allocate him such a fine and prestigious automobile , albeit a 14 years old one .

I trust that driving it did not induce in him a Toad of Toad Hall mentality towards other road users and members of the community .
 
Obviously , Bert would have been very much a young whippersnapper at the time and I am intrigued to learn how his employers came to allocate him such a fine and prestigious automobile , albeit a 14 years old one .

I trust that driving it did not induce in him a Toad of Toad Hall mentality towards other road users and members of the community .
Bert's old gaffer was of the old school, he took a shine to the young Bert. It was an old car but it had class. Government ministers rode in the back of them, it was automatic, bench seats and had a valve radio.

After a year Bert's gaffer swapped it for a Bedford van.
In Bert's book anything that cost him next to nowt was a good deal.

When Bert eventually became his own boss he had Mercs, five of them, but that Bedford van made him just as happy.
 

The last shop of it's kind is still open in Lincoln. 18B14-26.jpg
 
I'll be a few years longer in the tooth than you then CB, but I've very similar memories of that area.
I grew up just on
Abbey Glen laundry, Coniston Road, off Abbeydale Road. May 1983.
Now defunct. The main block frontage has been retained as part of an apartment/housing development for the whole site.
I walked past it regularly as a kid and have never forgotten the distinctive noise and warm, humid, chemical smell.

View attachment 88620
Bloody stone cladding. Do it reight gerrit pointed.
 

I'll be a few years longer in the tooth than you then CB, but I've very similar memories of that area.
I grew up just on the other side of Abbeydale Road, near Abbeydale school.The reason I walked past Abbey Glen so often was because the River Sheaf running along the back of T'Hardy Pick (as we called it) was my playground too. Our river patch covered from roughly Jack Clare's school of motoring on Rydal Road, to the gennel through Tyzacks across the river to Heeley baths.
Sticklebacking, tadpoleing, paddling, wading, damming, prospecting, and floating. Train spotting on the railway embankments and walls but never, never on the actual tracks.Wall -hopping across the backs of the house. Den building, scrapping. Endless footy on any scrap of land. Playing in the condemned house and buildings.
A daily warning from mum not to play in the river, but invariably returning home with wet and muddy shoes to a clip round round the ear...
No health and safety, no hygeine, no malice, no intentional damage or nuisance caused to anyone. Just endless fun.

I was only thinking the other day that "The Hardy Pick" is an unusual name for a pub. I pass it fairly regularly - obviously it's a new build - but where does the name come from? What is a Hardy pick?
 
What about P J Sisman on the Wicker, still seem to be open, as looked on Google maps. Stocks obsolete fittings but have to ask as they aren't on display, keeps them down in cellar.
Already posted as my first entry on the thread, "Sheffield's special little shops".
 
I was only thinking the other day that "The Hardy Pick" is an unusual name for a pub. I pass it fairly regularly - obviously it's a new build - but where does the name come from? What is a Hardy pick?
The Hardy Patent Pick company premises were on Little London Road in the early 1900's. I believe they were taken over by Laycock's by the time I was playing around there. Everyone I knew, family and friends, all called that area "t'Hardy Pick".
I mainly remember the road being dominated by Tyzack's though...
 
The Hardy Patent Pick company premises were on Little London Road in the early 1900's. I believe they were taken over by Laycock's by the time I was playing around there. Everyone I knew, family and friends, all called that area "t'Hardy Pick".
I mainly remember the road being dominated by Tyzack's though...
Thanks for that. I consider myself informed now!

A mate of mine worked for Tyzack's when he left school. Although I think he worked at the Tyzack's down Kelham Island way. I'd forgotten that Tyzack's were in that Hardy Pick area.
 
Bert must have been well up the company ladder to drive one of those? It wasn't your standard "company issue". It was one up from the Humber Hawk wasn't it? Which in itself was a fine car. But the Super Snipe was something else.

View attachment 88861
What a car, had 2.6cc engine, 3 geared manual and I believe weighed in at nearly 2 tons in old money. Often used to carry Government of the day officials. I have a nightmare image of Maggie climbing out of one in my head.
Maybe Bert was a top Government official in his day!!!


View attachment 88861
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That brings back memories. Did that train used to stop bang outside the ground? I have a memory of being at some away match in the 70's and a train pulling in above the ground and Blades fans pouring off it into the ground - may have been there?

That line ran from Bury and it closed in about 1970, but the nearest station was Bolton, which is about a 10 minute walk away down Manchester Road, so your memory’s playing tricks 🙂
 

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