dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 4, 2009 Author Share Posted March 4, 2009 The Brightside Bierlow before the Industrial Revolution The story of an old Sheffield township and the people who lived there by Winifred Albaya Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 4, 2009 Author Share Posted March 4, 2009 Photographic Memories of Sheffield 10 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 4, 2009 Author Share Posted March 4, 2009 Bumper Book of Beanos South Yorkshire People Reminisce about Works Outings, Trips to the Seaside and Other Merry Sprees Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 5, 2009 Author Share Posted March 5, 2009 Sheffield complied by Peter Harvey Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 5, 2009 Author Share Posted March 5, 2009 Sheffield- a Second Helping complied by Peter Harvey Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 5, 2009 Author Share Posted March 5, 2009 Sheffield- a Third Helping complied by Peter Harvey Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 5, 2009 Author Share Posted March 5, 2009 Memories of the Workhouse & Hospital Firvale Lyn Howsam Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 5, 2009 Author Share Posted March 5, 2009 Never far from Wincobank Hill Betty Dickinson Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 5, 2009 Author Share Posted March 5, 2009 Romance of the Wednesday Richard Sparling Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DaveH Posted March 5, 2009 Share Posted March 5, 2009 Is it this map of where the bombs fell taken from the book referred to by Dunsbyowl in post #2? In the same book is this second map of where the bombs fell showing the area south east of the city centre shown in the first map. Stuart0742 may remember that this map shows a much discussed bomb shown as falling at the junction of Cradock and Dagnam roads, between Frithy's house and the entrance to Norfolk school. When we were at school there was little evidence that a bomb had ever fallen here. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mickjj Posted March 6, 2009 Share Posted March 6, 2009 Zelma Katin was a 40-year-old housewife who had moved, with her husband and son, to a pleasant suburb of Sheffield in 1939. The outbreak of the Second World War turned their lives upside down: her husband was called-up and she was ordered to take a job in a either a munitions factory or in transport. She chose transport and became a tram conductress - a 'Clippie'. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest rhtinsley Posted March 6, 2009 Share Posted March 6, 2009 Zelma Katin was a 40-year-old housewife who had moved, with her husband and son, to a pleasant suburb of Sheffield in 1939. The outbreak of the Second World War turned their lives upside down: her husband was called-up and she was ordered to take a job in a either a munitions factory or in transport. She chose transport and became a tram conductress - a 'Clippie'. I don't know how to post a query. Can you help me? Richard Tinsley Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Old Canny Street Kid Posted March 8, 2009 Share Posted March 8, 2009 Romance of the Wednesday Richard Sparling Glad you mentioned wee pipe Sparling's book. R.A. Sparling was a hero of mine when I was a boy. He was sports editor of the old Sheffield Telegraph, and he wrote "Romance of the Wednesday" in 1926. Copies of the original volumes are worth quite a lot. The one illustrated in Dunsbyowl's posting was a reprint done without permission of Sparling's surviving family, and it caused a lot of upset at the time because it was still in copyright. Whether Sparling's family were ever recompensed, I don't know; but it is an example of how in this day and age there is little respect for the rights of authors. People just lift huge chunks from a book and put these into another book, often without acknowledgement. I mention this not as a moan, but in the hope that all our friends on Sheffield History will always remember to credit the original source. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Gramps Posted March 10, 2009 Share Posted March 10, 2009 Sheffield's Cinemas and Theatres Clifford H. Shaw and Stuart R. Smith, The Early Years of Cinema in Sheffield: 1896-1911, Sheffield Cinema Society, 1995 Clifford H. Shaw and Stuart R. Smith, Sheffield Cinemas - Past and Present, Sheffield Cinema Society, 1999 Clifford H. Shaw and Christopher S. Stacey, 'A Century of Cinema' in Aspects of Sheffield 2 (pp.182-200), edited by Melvyn Jones, Wharncliffe Publishing, 1999 Fred Turley, Mighty Music of the Movies: The Cinema Organ in Sheffield and the Surrounding Area, Sheaf Publishing, 1990. Richard P. Ward, In Memory of Sheffield's Cinemas, Sheffield City Libraries, 1988 Newsletters of the Sheffield Cinema Society, 1987 onwards (copies deposited in the Sheffield Local Studies Library). Bryen D. Hillerby, The Lost theatres of Sheffield, Wharncliffe, 1999 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 11, 2009 Author Share Posted March 11, 2009 'Damned Bad Place, Sheffield' Collected by Sylvia Pybus Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 12, 2009 Author Share Posted March 12, 2009 The Turner Story by Keith Farnsworth Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 12, 2009 Author Share Posted March 12, 2009 The Great Sheffield Picture Show Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Markbaby Posted March 13, 2009 Share Posted March 13, 2009 Do you remember? Old Sheffield Volumes 1 - 6. Published 1973 Published by Mail Graphics, 974 Abbeydale Road, Sheffield, S7 2QF 6 Booklets / folios, Approx 20 pages each, mainly with then & now B&W photographs (although the "now" is 1973) with a descriptive paragraph Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DaveH Posted March 13, 2009 Share Posted March 13, 2009 Markbaby reminded me of this book I have because of where he lives. The book is "The Changing Face Of Gleadless" by the author and artist Pauline Shearstone. This book is only available from Gleadless Townend post Office priced £9:95, although when it was first printed Pauline was selling autographed copies of her book in Gleadless Library on Whites Lane. Apparently Pauline has another, bigger, more detailed and more expensive book called "A history of Gleadless" which is quite elusive and hard to find, wouldn't mind a copy of it if I ever see one for sale. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stuart0742 Posted March 13, 2009 Share Posted March 13, 2009 Bygone Transport Sheffield On the Move Some previously unseen photo's in this book Currently £4.99 in The Works @ Meadowhall Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris1943 Posted April 9, 2009 Share Posted April 9, 2009 Newly aquired from ebay Sheffield It Story and Achievements by Mary Walton 1948 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris1943 Posted April 9, 2009 Share Posted April 9, 2009 Newly aquired from ebay Sheffield Its Story and Achievements by Mary Walton 1948 It has an inscription inside To Mr Mead from J Burgin, Mrs Stacey, P Crossley, S Oliver P. Pryor Christmas 1948 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stuart0742 Posted April 9, 2009 Share Posted April 9, 2009 Steam Day's on BR The Midland Line in Sheffield Sheffield Midland to Dore plus a little bit more Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stuart0742 Posted April 9, 2009 Share Posted April 9, 2009 Steam Memories 1950's and 1960's Sheffield Keith Pirt Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Old Canny Street Kid Posted April 16, 2009 Share Posted April 16, 2009 Eastwood's History of Ecclesfield is worth mentioning --didn't I once see somewhere on Sheffield History that someone had posted the entire book on here? Add to novels with a local background --Put Yourself in His Place by Charles Reade. This is a novel about the Sheffield Outrages and the Flood of 1964. The Good Lion by Len Doherty is also a novel based on Sheffield. The author was a feature writer on The Star. Wobble To Death by Peter Lovesey is a crime novel with a Victorian setting, and Peter Lovesey based his main character on the famous Sheffield pedestrian athlete George Littlewood. Off hand, I cannot think of the titles, but pre-war there was a journalist called J.L.Hodson who wrote a number of novels, and one or two of these were set in Sheffield. Just to say that J L Hodson (full name James Landsdale Hodson), who died on 28th August 1956, wrote a novel called English Family, which was set in wartime Sheffield. Although his personal links with Sheffield were laregely limited to visits as a journalist (he was very well known nationally in his heyday), his brother A.E. Hodson lived in Norfolk Road and was a superintendent at Metropolitan Vickers works in the east end of Sheffield. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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