Lovely caf. Green Lanes has changed so much since we were youngsters especially the current work on the cycle lane which is quite an issue locally. St. Clements Press. He was ARP in WW2 and a member of Fives Clubafter the war ended 5s Club held a party for local children in the club house. We always had nice Rose bushes ! (Miss Watts?) Just request to join and add your own memories and photos. Bombs dropped in Palmers Green - Bomb Sight Lots of happy memories of Palmers Green ice cream at John Coombs sweet shop. It would have been a V1 flying bomb Lilian. Like a Local: 7 Great Cafes and Restaurants in Palmers Green Ma used to send me there up Hedge Lane in the school olidays with a shillin for my lunch (includin tip)I remembers the custard. Sylvia. And the wonderful smell Hi Sylvia, in the P.Green archives somewhere there is a report that on the night of March 15th 1941 the Princes Dance Hall (corner of Princes Ave) was packed with young couples. Sylvia. an dreemin on ..do you remember Lou Ansell and is Dance Band founded I believe at Hazlewood Lane Skool and practicin evenins before puttin on dances for the skool and other worthy causes. Ta. . I manage to find scraped ice cream every now and then but nothing like the taste I remember. Few people in those days owned a car, most of us used public . Its best to just have fond memories of how it was Sylvia. Mon May 03 Miss Hughes was head of the infant school. Maybe it was rebuilt very quickly or my memorys going! Sylvia , there was a WW2 bombsite at the corner of Sidney Ave/Green Lanes near Bowes Rd it was used in the 50/60/70s as a car yard called Kieth Cars, no longer live in PG so not sure what stands there today. We often played up the Wreck at the end of Lynbridge grdns where the parky Mr Moody and his co parky Mr Savage would chase us if we caused them any trouble! Hi Gerry, I,m not sure but you could well be right as I do not remember any other type of restaurant there, Regards Brian. I can say that Victor enjoyed every minute of every day. I lived in New River Crescent 1950, 60s and 70s. I think it was late 50s . I do remember though looking at one of those planes that were bombs without pilots (forgot what they were called could it be doodle bug) with my dad and its engine stopped right over head. Hi. Dave Todd. One old lady lost her life in the fire. Happy days playing in the yard out back. He also made excellent onion omelettes. I assume there was no ammunition in the house, though! I worked in Tesco in Palmers Green when I was 16 years old in roughly 1990. Ray in Cornywall. Dordrecht, Netherlands A saxophonist my father often booked had the first name of Larry. Hi David, yes, I remember Keiths Cars being there for many years &, as Richard S says, it is now a tyre dealer and I remember Pitmans just opp. Does anyone the name of the 1960s Record Shop in the parade of shops at the Cambridge Roundabout at the junction of Hedge Lane and the North Circular Road ? Ah yes. Singing Tom used to give me all the flower heads to play with. Would love to hear your memories of the 50s & 60s. The headmistress, Miss Hughes must have been about 110, My class teacher was a woman aptly named Mrs Dark a horrible and spiteful woman. A quaint . David they are wonderful memories arent they? Trusted memories of the museum By Suzanne Beard October 23, 2012 2 Comments If you were a child (or even an adult) in Palmers Green between 1925 and the early 1980s, chances are that a highlight of a visit to Broomfield Park would have been a nose around Broomfield House Museum. Im sure Fred Rain lived in the Larches. Thanks again. Hi Mike, yes I remember Bruno walking from the cafe with snooker cue in hand after a days work to the Cock pub to try & win a few bob in the billiard room, he also had the Bezazz Coffee Bar corner of Princes Ave, with juke box & pin ball machines great times all for the price of a coke or coffee with your mates.
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