You shouldn't have married her, then you'd have a cast iron toilet cistern to love.
Matt,
I am confused (possibly really slow). But what was on Culcross Road/Albany Road in 1960s? It is now the Culross and Albany Close flats... I assumed it was previously park land, but this map suggests actual roads existed?
Culross Road?
I had to think for a minute. Something rang a bell in my head. Ah yes, Culross Road - the home of Horseshoe Coaches.. Horseshoe Coaches worked all the school swimming journeys from i.e. Woodlands Park School to the Municipal Baths on Tottenham Green. JUV352 was a regular on the Woodlands Park School journeys and I've ridden on it myself. http://tottenham-summerhillroad.com/horseshoe_photos.htm
The Summerhill Road wesbsite has some images of the Summerhill Road depot, but I'm sure their offices were actually in Culross Road. The road was certainly shown on the back of the coaches. That area was redeveloped around 1971/72, along with the north side of West Green Road and Caversham Road.
So what is now Culross and Albany Close flats was a coach office/depot?
No, that area and West Green Road had smaller cottage type housing. Not the later terraced type of the Gardens or Ladder roads, but smaller individual cottages often double cottages (along West Green Road) dating back to about 1860/1870, a mix of small family businesses and housing.
The Gardens & Ladder houses were about twenty years younger. There was also a large Stonemasons in that area, that produced most of the Gravestones for South Tottenham families.
Thank you, this is fascinating...!
3 Culross Road was the address of the original garage and offices of Horseshoe Coaches, started in the late 'twenties by Henry Holmes, a blacksmith working from that address (hence the name). Later, an office was opened at 362 West Green Road, and in the late 'sixties transferred to 341, which became a Doctor's surgery after Horseshoe ceased trading in 1991. The Summerhill Road garage was added when the company expanded in the 'forties, at the same time opening a depot at Kempston in Bedfordshire. The history of Horseshoe (with pictures of all the premises mentioned, plus details of other businesses acquired) is well documented in three books by David Rutter, all still available, great-grandson of the founder.
i'll search for the book
Thank you!
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