Portsmouth's main street before it was destroyed for a motorway
Wartime photographs are as popular as ever but there is a limit of course.
So can I thank Mick Cooper, co-author of Pompey Pop Pix and The History of Portsmouth Football Club who has allowed me to search through his hundreds of photographs and cuttings he has stored for many years.
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Hide AdThere are many cuttings from The News which include reports of people in the 1960s and ’70s and I am sure many readers will find themselves staring at themselves as they were some 50 years ago.
So, over the coming months stand by for some some wonderful memories of the way we were. Thank you Mick.
• In 1973 the 42nd Portsmouth Music Festival had an extra day added as there was a last-minute rush of entries.
That year was the competition’s silver anniversary. It was 25 years after it was revived following the Second World War. The organisers were Mr and Mrs H Primer and Miss Florence Greaves.
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Hide AdHere we see girls from the Southsea Modern School folk dance club cleaning some of the 171 trophies to be presented. It took six to eight people eight hours to make the trophies dazzle.
The black and white photograph shows pupils from Wakeford School, West Leigh, Havant. The girl in the front is Margaret Beams, 12, who won the trumpet/cornet solo section for under-14s. If you are in the photographs please let me know where you are now.
• The photo on the facing page was taken a few doors up from where Charles Dickens was born at 393 Commercial Road, Portsmouth. The chemists is at 403 and was owned by Mr CJ Price. The car is turning into Herbert Street with (in 1962) the Apollo restaurant on the far corner.
For some reason 419 is arrowed, the premises of grocer Mr RC Marshall. Everything you can see has now been wiped from the face of Portsmouth.
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Hide Ad• Who remembers going on holiday before the days of cheap air fares? Many used to stay locally and visit one of the holiday camps on Hayling Island. One was the Sunshine Camp and in this view we see cyclists on what appears to be side-by-side carrier bikes. What were they called?
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