Author Topic: Rock & Sons Hastings  (Read 22934 times)

Offline charlotteCH

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Re: Rock & Sons Hastings
« Reply #9 on: Wednesday 01 April 09 14:49 BST (UK) »
Hullo again Chris 1909,
 If you know about carriage makers, maybe you can tell me what a charbanc[spelling?] looks like please.

Someone told me deacdes ago that my forebears  used to go off in one for picnics in 1890s in Yks dales... there were 9 kids so it must have been a capacious vehicle.

charlotte

Offline 1909

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Re: Rock & Sons Hastings
« Reply #10 on: Wednesday 01 April 09 16:17 BST (UK) »
Hi Charlotte,

A charabanc was a sort of open-topped bus. I have attached a picture of one outside a hotel in TW in I guess about 1911. In the 1890's they would have been horse-drawn but I think that the concept was the same - rows of seats on an open cart.

Chris 1909

Offline charlotteCH

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Re: Rock & Sons Hastings
« Reply #11 on: Thursday 02 April 09 01:17 BST (UK) »
Chris1909, Thanks.

Would it have been a public vehicle or would the family have hired it for the picnic? They were not short of money .

The one particular outing about which I know was from Ilkley to Bolton Abbey, so was it door to door or wait on the bus stop?

charlotte

Offline 1909

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Re: Rock & Sons Hastings
« Reply #12 on: Thursday 02 April 09 09:59 BST (UK) »
Hi Charlotte,

My feeling is that they were hired for excursions, though probably by a group larger than a family. A pub in Tunbridge Wells for example, hired one (possibly two) in Sept 1909 for a day's excursion through the hop fields to Maidstone. I also get the feeling that local church groups and societies did do things on a shared basis more than we do now, and picnics were popular.


Chris 1909


Offline charlotteCH

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Re: Rock & Sons Hastings
« Reply #13 on: Thursday 02 April 09 10:35 BST (UK) »
Thanks Chris 1909,
 it would probably have been my father's family and perhaps another family of freinds  or two with appropriate baskets of food etc..

How I wish I'd asked when told about it... I just stood there at Bolton Abbey  like a dumb bunny and my old uncle didn't want to bore me so didn't elaborate.. the stupidity and the wasted opportunities.  :( ::)

charlotte

Offline Chris in 1066Land

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Re: Rock & Sons Hastings
« Reply #14 on: Tuesday 07 April 09 14:40 BST (UK) »
Hi again Chris 1909

Thanks for that article on Rock & Sons - pretty interesting.

I would like to obtain a copy of that picture of their showroom as seen in the article - can you please advise your source.

Just one interesting comment - The Diorapha was invented just prior to the 1851 exhibition, but the date on that picture is c1830 with parts of the dioprah hanging from the rafters some 20 years before it was invented - how can that be?

Chris in 1066
One of Rootschats Founder Members RIP 1942-2021
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Offline 1909

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Re: Rock & Sons Hastings
« Reply #15 on: Tuesday 07 April 09 18:24 BST (UK) »
Hi Chris in 1066,

The picture came from a booklet issued by Rock, Thorpe & Co in 1922 to celebrate their centenary. The caption to the picture actually says 1830, but then I always explain to people that we know more about history than people did in the past, so it could just be an error.

Picture attached.

Chris 1909

Offline Chris in 1066Land

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Re: Rock & Sons Hastings
« Reply #16 on: Tuesday 07 April 09 20:05 BST (UK) »
Chris 1909

Thanks for that picture - now added it to my databse.

I think the caption should have read 1850 instaed of 1830 - but hey, never mind, its a great photo.

Took these two pictures when I was given an escorted tour of the building by the site foreman - Incidentally it is a listed building, so all these features had to remain and they just been covered up.
I think the showroom is still recognizable from your picture though
One of Rootschats Founder Members RIP 1942-2021
Living at the Heart of English History in 1066Land. 
www.Rootschat.com/history/hastings

Swarbrooke Family Heritage
https://swarbrooke.co.uk

Own Ancestral Website:    http://maythornemill.webs.com                                          
Monumental Sculptures Website:    http://Tombstones.webs.com

 Local History Site: http://zouch.webs.com
Baldslow Local History site
http://web.archive.org/web/20140626153455/http://www

Offline Chris in 1066Land

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Re: Rock & Sons Hastings
« Reply #17 on: Tuesday 07 April 09 20:16 BST (UK) »
Hi again

Whilst doing the renovation / conversion to flats, the builders found the following which we think belongs to the 1930's time period.

Obviously in those days it was a 'Tea Room' with live music and the menu (not shown here) had the following price list

'Suggestion for Tea'
Toasted Teacake  4d
Toasted Scone     3d
Toasted Crumpet 4d
Sardines on Toast  1/-
Spaghetti on Toast 1/-
Welsh Rarebit 1/3d
Something with Chips 2/6d
Salad 1/6d

Wow - how the other half lived in those days
One of Rootschats Founder Members RIP 1942-2021
Living at the Heart of English History in 1066Land. 
www.Rootschat.com/history/hastings

Swarbrooke Family Heritage
https://swarbrooke.co.uk

Own Ancestral Website:    http://maythornemill.webs.com                                          
Monumental Sculptures Website:    http://Tombstones.webs.com

 Local History Site: http://zouch.webs.com
Baldslow Local History site
http://web.archive.org/web/20140626153455/http://www