Back to the past in Blandford Street with a look at Bedan, Dacks and Kate Elwen
and live on Freeview channel 276
They all belonged in the same Sunderland street which still stands after 180 years of history.
Philip Curtis, from Sunderland Antiquarian Society, reports.
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Hide AdBlandford Street was built in the 1840s and has hosted traders such as Blacklock’s the jewellers, Leadbitter’s the chemists, and Arrowsmith’s bookshop.
The street is believed to have been named after the Marquis of Blandford, the eldest son of the Duke of Marlborough.
The street was initially houses and was dubbed “the short cut to the station” because of the town’s Central Station which opened around the corner in 1879.
Eight years later, the Blandford House pub opened and, by the end of the 19th Century, the street was mainly shops as traders benefited from the increasing footfall from the railway.
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Hide AdIt soon became one of the thriving shopping areas of the town and, by the 1950s, most of the businesses in the street were household names.
These included Blacklock’s the jewellers, Leadbitter’s the chemists, Arrowsmith’s bookshop, Bedan Fashions, Fred Stewart’s fireplace shop, Hector Grabham’s the decorators and Dack’s who dealt in typewriters.
Sheet music was available at Katie Elwen’s, whilst at the south side of the street on the corner stood Bergs, directly across the road from Knightall’s furniture store.
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Hide AdThe street boasted Sunderland’s first Wimpey Bar, which, when first opened, would not allow entry after 10pm to females who were
unaccompanied.
Grantham’s furniture carpet shop and A. Hector Grabham’s paint and wallpaper store graced the north side of the street.
Arguably the busiest shop was Arrowsmith’s bookshop which was between Smythe’s the bakers and Bedan Fashion.
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Hide AdJoe Arrowsmith began with a stall in the old market down High Street East before opening a penny library in Hendon and, by the 1950s, the
family had a book and magazine stall in Jacky White’s market as well as their shop in Blandford Street.
Although the street is still a shopping parade, the well-known family owned shops of the past are long gone and, with part of the street having
recently been destroyed in a fire, a number of the old premises are now occupied by charity shops.
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Hide AdHowever, the pub, now called The Blandford, is still going strong and businesses are working hard in an attempt to recapture the atmosphere that existed there over a half a century ago.
Our thanks go to Philip. The story of Blandford Street features in the latest monthly newsletter which is circulated to members of the Antiquarian Society. It is packed with many more great reads and you can enjoy them by signing up to the society.
The society holds extensive archives which were amassed and donated by the people of Sunderland.
To find out more about the Antiquarian Society, visit its Facebook page or http://www.sunderland-antiquarians.org
To apply to become a member, email [email protected]
To share your own memories of Sunderland over the years, email [email protected]