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Little Drift Lass 26-07-2013 07:17 PM

Day lady
 
Do any of you drifters remember the "day lady man that used to come around the Drift at the weekends and the things he sold, I will be very interested in what you can remember or maybe some of you are a bit to young to remember him

Jimjohn63 26-07-2013 08:51 PM

I remember him,I think he wore a long rain coat and would open his suit case on the door step,I think my mam would buy tights off him.

Can you remember the pink paraffin man and the pop wagon,seems like a different world

janwhin 27-07-2013 02:32 PM

The pink pariffin man was Johnny Park. He and my uncle, Bill Whinham had the business. Johnny did the local area and my uncle went up into the rural bits of the county. They used to reckon he would always get through to remote farms whatever the weather.
They kept their vans in a garage at North Broomhill, opposite the church, just as you turn on to the Acklington Road. There's a bungalow on the site now.

Derilda 27-07-2013 07:22 PM

The Drift
 
When my Granny and Grandad lived on Hedgehope I remember a man, calling with his suitcase, at thier house. My Granny always referred to him as 'Sam's lad' but he was fifty if he was a day. I never met Sam so he must have been a pre-war salesman. The younger of the two, that I saw, always seemed to have a supply of ladies clothes that were hard to get in the 1940s due to clothes rationing. That was how I came to see him. My Mother wanted to see what was available too. We lived at North Broomhill so Granny would tell her when 'Sams Lad' was due and we would catch Craigs' bus to The Drift.
Janwhin, your uncle and his partner were in competition with Tommy Allan's van for selling paraffin. Alger Emmerson? used to come to The Drift too. They all used to sell more than just paraffin too. How they got so much onto the van was a logistical miracle but I thank them for the memories I have of them. The vans had a smell all of thier own which I am sure I can still smell as I sit here typing.

John@theDrift 30-07-2013 07:36 AM

"Anything the day, Lady?"
I think he was still visiting the Drift into the mid '70s. Did he used to walk from Ashington?
The late Jackie Elliott was the pop and crisps man I remember, used to bottle his own pop from home in Togston Road. Friday nights, bottle of pop and a bag of crisps from his van then home for 'It's a Knockout' and the Generation Game... what we wouldn't give to be back there, eh?

Little Drift Lass 30-07-2013 02:14 PM

"day lady man"
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by janwhin (Post 2265)
The pink pariffin man was Johnny Park. He and my uncle, Bill Whinham had the business. Johnny did the local area and my uncle went up into the rural bits of the county. They used to reckon he would always get through to remote farms whatever the weather.
They kept their vans in a garage at North Broomhill, opposite the church, just as you turn on to the Acklington Road. There's a bungalow on the site now.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Derilda (Post 2266)
When my Granny and Grandad lived on Hedgehope I remember a man, calling with his suitcase, at thier house. My Granny always referred to him as 'Sam's lad' but he was fifty if he was a day. I never met Sam so he must have been a pre-war salesman. The younger of the two, that I saw, always seemed to have a supply of ladies clothes that were hard to get in the 1940s due to clothes rationing. That was how I came to see him. My Mother wanted to see what was available too. We lived at North Broomhill so Granny would tell her when 'Sams Lad' was due and we would catch Craigs' bus to The Drift.
Janwhin, your uncle and his partner were in competition with Tommy Allan's van for selling paraffin. Alger Emmerson? used to come to The Drift too. They all used to sell more than just paraffin too. How they got so much onto the van was a logistical miracle but I thank them for the memories I have of them. The vans had a smell all of thier own which I am sure I can still smell as I sit here typing.

Quote:

Originally Posted by John@theDrift (Post 2278)
"Anything the day, Lady?"
I think he was still visiting the Drift into the mid '70s. Did he used to walk from Ashington?
The late Jackie Elliott was the pop and crisps man I remember, used to bottle his own pop from home in Togston Road. Friday nights, bottle of pop and a bag of crisps from his van then home for 'It's a Knockout' and the Generation Game... what we wouldn't give to be back there, eh?

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jimjohn63 (Post 2261)
I remember him,I think he wore a long rain coat and would open his suit case on the door step,I think my mam would buy tights off him.

Can you remember the pink paraffin man and the pop wagon,seems like a different world

Yeah he did wear a large raincoat which had pockets in the lining that was full of books and other stuff he sold ,for by what he had in his suitcase. I do believe he came from Ashington must have been a hell of a walk eh. I don't recall Sams lad though that must have been before my time.

I do remember the pink paraffin man the one I knew was Alger the pop man was Jackie Elliot but we also had Waters & Robsons from Morpeth when you think of it we didn't have to leave the Drift to buy anything it came to us,John the butcher from Morpeth plus Smails the Butcher ,Hadrians would come out and take your shopping order and deliver it a few days later ,fresh veg would come from the back garden,I can remember my dad taking the flex from an electic blanket and use it to heat a warm frame in the garden to grow small melons The Good Life eh. Thanks Drifters will put some photos together once I find out how to work this laptop ,not very good at it at the mo

Alan J. 30-07-2013 02:42 PM

Jack Elliott, the "pop" man, was my daughters father in law, his wife, Eva, still lives in the bungalow beside the "Toggie" club. I believe this was Jacks pop factory which they converted into a bungalow when he finished with the pop. He finished his working life at Alcan.

mipattison 31-07-2013 07:12 PM

Day Lady Man
 
I used to buy the little story books, my brothers bought the little commando books. we saved our pennies up all week.


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