THE DEPARTMENT STORE

Are you being served Collage 2Grace Brothers Department Store
became possibly the most famous store in the world for a while thanks to
the BBC-Television Series, Are You Being Served?

Are You being Served Theme Music

Click here to watch the episode, HAPPY RETURNS

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SHOPPING WITH MY FATHER

Either you enjoy shopping at a large department store or you don’t.  Many of those who do are able to spend hours wandering around the numerous floors filled with goods, endlessly browsing and then perhaps buying things that may be of use or else purchased on a whim and returned a few days later. I remember a woman I once knew who was able to spend the whole day in one large department store. She would go from floor to floor examining, prodding, feeling and doing various other things to goods and never got bored or so she said. I was amazed at her energy for such an activity.

shopping woman

I suspect that most people do not share the joy experienced by this woman. Many perhaps remember from their childhood days being dragged around a store at Christmas to look for presents for people they hardly knew or cared about.  I am sure that we were all dragged around a store at other times to buy new clothes for school!

In spite of these early heinous memories, I am sure some grew to enjoy the occasional visit to a big store while others, mostly men, try hard not to spend time in them.  These men probably have wives, girl friends or even daughters who are willing to buy things on their behave.  However, the majority of men have to accompany their significant other periodically and shop and have to tolerate being asked for their opinion on possible purchases and, worst of all, having to endure the endless waiting.

Men Shopping Collage

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My father hated going to the big stores in the West End.  We occasionally went to Oxford Street on a Thursday evening since they were open for late night shopping in those days.  As I was still very young, my mother held on to me so that I did not get lost while my father was left to fend for himself.  Normally he would walk some distance in front of us, but on Oxford or Regent Street on a Thursday night during the 1950s, he was unable to do this and was completely out of his depth in the battle to keep pace.

Oxford Street 2

I remember that my mother and I were able to walk along the street at a reasonably slow, but steady pace, window-shopping as we went while my father had great difficulty keeping up.  The poor man found himself constantly being tossed back and forth across the pavement and occasionally into the street.  Slowly, but steadily, he slipped further and further back.  I think that my mother gained some satisfaction at his difficulties.  I believe that she saw it as retribution for the things that he did to us to make our lives miserable at times.

christmas-shopping-1957

Slowly, but surely, his anger got the better of him and we soon heard him telling people off who had battered him, as he attempted to move against the stream. Eventually, my mother took pity on him and we stopped and waited for him to catch up.

In those days, most men wore hats and my father was always careful to steam his hat before going out.  When he finally caught up with us, he arrived with his hat pushed to one side and with a very reddened face.  He immediately began complaining bitterly about the women who had assaulted him with various weapons such as umbrellas, shopping bags or their person.  We could not help but smile, as my father described his interactions employing the most colourful of language.

My Parents Collage

My father had a loud voice and was not ashamed to allow the various passers-by hear of his displeasure.  Naturally none of them took any notice of his remarks and we failed to appreciate his battle scars.  My mother told him to walk behind her and he would not get hurt.  Although he tried to comply, my mother had other plans for him.  After a few yards, she always moved across the width of the pavement leaving my father to engage in combat with what always seemed to be large women.  After an assault on his person, he began to slip into the distance once more. My mother failed to heed his cries for her to stop and later swore that she had not heard his entreaties.

I hate to admit that I choke with laughter whenever I think of his difficulties.

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SHOPPING WITH MY MOTHER

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I would like to thank Mr. Paul Bland for his help.

3 thoughts on “THE DEPARTMENT STORE – SHOPPING WITH MY FATHER

  1. Charles Post author

    How lovely it was to find your website! For years I’ve tried to find information about Dawsons department store. I was born at St Bartholomews hospital in 1957 so am a true cockney and spent until 1989 living in various parts of Islington.

    Dawsons has special memories for me, I remember my Mother taking me there and visiting the toy department, your description of the lifts suddenly brought the memories flooding back! I seem to recall that there was a passage that joined one area to another, as a child I found it fascinating but I can’t recall which areas it joined.

    I also remember the payment system, I was mesmorised by it!

    The ironic thing is that when I was looking for work I walked past the building that was Dawsons and saw that it had become an insurance company, as I needed a job I applied for a junior post there and got it! I was to spend 12 years there. Prior to that I worked further down the road at 145 City Road which again was an insurance company.

    It was great to see the pictures of the now mainly defunct department stores, again they bring back happy memories of shopping trips with my Mum, I couldn’t see Bourne and Hollingsworth which was also in Oxford Street and had many changes before finally closing.

    These days I’m an Essex girl, Working and living in London was not for me.

    With regards.

    Penny.

    Reply:

    Thanks for the memories!

    Charles.

    Reply
  2. Reg Glynn

    hi Charles,
    found your site as Gamages popped up in my head.
    I was born in 1949 in the London Hospital,so I consider myself a Cockney,which brings me grief cos I live in Yorkshire!!
    I lived at 12 Gales Gardens till I was 11,when we moved to Islington.
    Both my parents are dead,but I know my dad was an ARP during the war,and he told me about the Bethnal Green disaster.
    He told me he helped lay out the bodies under the arch.
    He also used to walk me via the back streets to Brick Lane and Petticoat Lane,and I loved having a bowl of jellied eels,and looking at the crates of puppies and kittens.
    He also went to school with the Kray twins,but was a year behind.
    As I said my parents are dead,but these are word of mouth from my parents.
    Reg Glynn

    Reply

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