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Maroon Sailor

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Maroon Sailor
30 minutes ago, alwaysthereinspirit said:

Yes, where luca ice cream would be (have been) up towards Craigmillar Castle.

Not sure what those small white things are in the top right corner. Don't remember a graveyard there.

 

Cheers

 

Those small white things were what threw me a bit. I wonder what they were

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1 hour ago, alwaysthereinspirit said:

Yes, where luca ice cream would be (have been) up towards Craigmillar Castle.

Not sure what those small white things are in the top right corner. Don't remember a graveyard there.

 

47 minutes ago, Maroon Sailor said:

 

Cheers

 

Those small white things were what threw me a bit. I wonder what they were

I'd think those are hay ricks. The hay baler wasn't invented till mid to late 30s.

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alwaysthereinspirit
1 minute ago, Lemongrab said:

 

I'd think those are hay ricks. The hay baler wasn't invented till mid to late 30s.

good call. Doubt they'd have built on a graveyard. That was houses and stores along there later. Most likely farm land back then.

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16 minutes ago, Maroon Sailor said:

Corstorphine Station.

 

Where exactly was this located ? What road was it on ?

IMG_1586.JPG

Station Road? 

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Maroon Sailor
3 minutes ago, Gulpener said:

Station Road? 

 

The phot was listed as Corstorphine Station and thought it might be different from Pinkhill.

 

Obviously not !

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Maroon Sailor
13 minutes ago, jonesy said:

Sciennes. The wee side street off of Causewayside. I work opposite it and walk past it everyday after dropping my son off at school.

 

Picture's a wee bit out of date now, though. An IT company is in there, really friendly guys. 

 

Still got Fire Station engraved in the brick work ?

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1 hour ago, Maroon Sailor said:

 

Cheers

 

Those small white things were what threw me a bit. I wonder what they were

It looks like it could be sheaves of wheat, probably a farm somewhere too close to orderly and too many I would think to be gravestones of the day.

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4 hours ago, J.T.F.Robertson said:

 

Bob, would that be close to where you had the fall whilst chasing that couple of suspicious characters and they came back to check if you were alright before taking off again?

I always remember that story.

 

 

Yes looks like the area but was a wee bit more built up then

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Maroon Sailor
2 minutes ago, Jambo_Gaz said:

What a photo this is. When was this taken?

 

I think it was 1958

 

Won't be far off that year. The station continued until 1965

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16 minutes ago, jonesy said:

 

 

Will check in the morning!

 

Quite the wee street for history buffs... old fire station, old police station and the Jewish cemetery.

 I thought I had answered this post earlier but it looks lke I didn,t. The police station was actually on Causewayside, was the headquarters of A division and was known as Braid Place Station. The Firehall was in Braid Place, and later became the garage for the two station vehicles, a van and the divisionbal car. There was an office in the garage, and it was the police box for what was known as 6 patrol whic was from there to S.College Street. It was also used by the sergeant for the 2nd section.  Knew it well spent time there on the patrol, and when divisional driver washing the van and the car which was the drivers responsibility every night during night shift.

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Maroon Sailor
1 minute ago, graygo said:

 

Is that Newhaven?

 

It is - an earlier shot of roughly the same area as the phot I posted above it

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1 minute ago, Maroon Sailor said:

 

It is - an earlier shot of roughly the same area as the phot I posted above it

 

:thumbsup:

 

Don't know how I missed that.

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Maroon Sailor
3 minutes ago, graygo said:

 

Capture.JPG

 

Good stuff. Never even considered that to have been a hotel in it's former guise !

 

IMG_2382.JPG

Edited by Maroon Sailor
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Maroon Sailor
4 minutes ago, Randy Marsh said:

Going to guess at Pilrig. From Leith Walk.

 

Good shout. Hard to recognise it with the lack of parked cars !

 

Bit of a dip in the road though

 

 

Edited by Maroon Sailor
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6 minutes ago, Randy Marsh said:

Going to guess at Pilrig. From Leith Walk.

 

The windows on the church don't look right to me.

 

The bit past it does though.

 

Edit: On second look it actually does, just distorted a wee bit.

 

 

Capture.JPG

Edited by graygo
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1 hour ago, Gulpener said:

Station Road? 

Yes.  Loving seeing Station Road as my gran and grandad lived on St. John’s Road when I was wee.

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Maroon Sailor
3 minutes ago, graygo said:

 

The windows on the church don't look right to me.

 

The bit past it does though.

 

 

Capture.JPG

 

It's the dip in the road that makes me think it might not be Pilrig Street

 

IMG_2380.JPG

Edited by Maroon Sailor
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12 hours ago, luckyBatistuta said:

More from bobs beat

 

 

52FE62A4-CF0B-4EF4-8CF9-1CFE4F432381.jpeg

417EFF73-3C33-4D55-B184-13273B0E709B.jpeg

3DEBC8FA-556E-4123-8C80-6C319AB40DAD.jpeg

 

Middle photo is (I think) of Prospect Street (the street at the bottom running horizontally).

Now this is important, does anybody know the numbers of the houses covered in the photo, Bob Sharp or someone else perhaps, my dad was born in Prospect Street, and it would be great if the house he was born in was in that photo.

Bottom photo is (again I believe) Middle & East Arthur Place, another of my families haunts.

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2 minutes ago, Maroon Sailor said:

 

It's the dip in the road that makes me think it might not be Pilrig Street

 

IMG_2380.JPG

 

I've changed my mind and am now convinced that it is.

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31 minutes ago, graygo said:

 

I've changed my mind and am now convinced that it is.

I think the chimney in the background is old chancelot mill,it was demolished in 1971.

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luckyBatistuta
48 minutes ago, Jambo-Jimbo said:

 

Middle photo is (I think) of Prospect Street (the street at the bottom running horizontally).

Now this is important, does anybody know the numbers of the houses covered in the photo, Bob Sharp or someone else perhaps, my dad was born in Prospect Street, and it would be great if the house he was born in was in that photo.

Bottom photo is (again I believe) Middle & East Arthur Place, another of my families haunts.

 

Sorry buddy, I’ve no idea about the numbers ?

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luckyBatistuta
52 minutes ago, Maroon Sailor said:

 

It's the dip in the road that makes me think it might not be Pilrig Street

 

IMG_2380.JPG

 

 

Definitely Pilrig Street 

 

 

901AD726-4CDF-48D0-AC2E-5BF788C3E076.jpeg

2DE3024C-339E-42ED-9A4C-4F728C57A7CE.jpeg

261CDAC0-A93D-4F02-987D-A3EA99A288FA.jpeg

322A0811-8AE4-4AF1-9AC2-E7CCB07F1BF5.jpeg

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9 hours ago, bobsharp said:

 I thought I had answered this post earlier but it looks lke I didn,t. The police station was actually on Causewayside, was the headquarters of A division and was known as Braid Place Station. The Firehall was in Braid Place, and later became the garage for the two station vehicles, a van and the divisionbal car. There was an office in the garage, and it was the police box for what was known as 6 patrol whic was from there to S.College Street. It was also used by the sergeant for the 2nd section.  Knew it well spent time there on the patrol, and when divisional driver washing the van and the car which was the drivers responsibility every night during night shift.

 

 

Bob is this the old police station. Can't find Braid Place?

Causewayside_Police_Station.png

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Maroon Sailor

London Road Fire Station

 

IMG_1591.JPG

 

Apparently a Hibs player in the 50's owned that shop on the corner

 

 

Edited by Maroon Sailor
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been here before
15 minutes ago, Maroon Sailor said:

London Road Fire Station

 

IMG_1591.JPG

 

Apparently a Hibs player in the 50's owned that shop on the corner

 

 

My mums side of the family grew up there.

 

The shop on the corner was one of those old fashioned sweetie shops, or confectioners" if you're posh, used to sell "boilings" and have rows upon rows of jars filled with old sweets.

 

I think it might have been called C.J's or something.

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46 minutes ago, Stuart Lyon said:

SUTOL - thanks should have looked at the old NLS maps.

 

This must have been the old fire house 

Sciennes_Houses.png

If you zoom in, it says 'fire station' above one of the windows. ;):)

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Maroon Sailor
2 minutes ago, been here before said:

My mums side of the family grew up there.

 

The shop on the corner was one of those old fashioned sweetie shops, or confectioners" if you're posh, used to sell "boilings" and have rows upon rows of jars filled with old sweets.

 

I think it might have been called C.J's or something.

 

Hibs player who owned the shop was called Archie Buchanan.

 

Never heard of him 

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been here before
2 minutes ago, Maroon Sailor said:

 

Hibs player who owned the shop was called Archie Buchanan.

 

Never heard of him 

 

You sure?

 

Ive found a bit in this article, about halfway down...

 

https://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/our-region/edinburgh/edinburgh-s-lost-sweet-shops-remembered-by-city-s-residents-1-4335231

 

"One shop which fell under this category, and which I am thankfully old enough to remember, was Casey’s. The family-run confectioner’s served the city with pride for over 70 years, selling their own handmade sweets and chocolates from two shops, one at the top end of Easter Road and another on St Mary’s Street. Both shops were lined wall-to-wall with a hundred jars containing every variety of classic swedger you could possibly imagine. The assistants looked the part, too. Casey’s outlet on Easter Road was popular with Hibs fans who turned up in their droves to purchase the green and white coloured “Easter Road rock” with their club’s name running through it. Founder Mr Casey opened his first sweet shop at Potterrow in the 1930s and worked with his nephew to produce their own sweets until his death at the grand old age of 91.

 

In 2002 Casey’s won an award as the ‘best sweetie shop in the UK’".
 

 

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Maroon Sailor
3 minutes ago, been here before said:

 

You sure?

 

Ive found a bit in this article, about halfway down...

 

https://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/our-region/edinburgh/edinburgh-s-lost-sweet-shops-remembered-by-city-s-residents-1-4335231

 

"One shop which fell under this category, and which I am thankfully old enough to remember, was Casey’s. The family-run confectioner’s served the city with pride for over 70 years, selling their own handmade sweets and chocolates from two shops, one at the top end of Easter Road and another on St Mary’s Street. Both shops were lined wall-to-wall with a hundred jars containing every variety of classic swedger you could possibly imagine. The assistants looked the part, too. Casey’s outlet on Easter Road was popular with Hibs fans who turned up in their droves to purchase the green and white coloured “Easter Road rock” with their club’s name running through it. Founder Mr Casey opened his first sweet shop at Potterrow in the 1930s and worked with his nephew to produce their own sweets until his death at the grand old age of 91.

 

In 2002 Casey’s won an award as the ‘best sweetie shop in the UK’".
 

 

 

I'd go along with that myself. This was the comment I read about the shop

 

Hibs Footballer

Archie Buchanan

"I've now been reminded that the footballer who owned the corner shop (visible in the old picture of the fire station)

London road Fire Station  -  converted for use by Edinburgh University Settlement ©

was Archie Buchanan - a 1950s 'Hibs' great'."

Laurie Thompson, Chipping Sodbury, Gloucestershire, England:  August 10, 2015

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35 minutes ago, Maroon Sailor said:

London Road Fire Station

 

IMG_1591.JPG

 

Apparently a Hibs player in the 50's owned that shop on the corner

 

 

I remember the fire station very well, as I grew up in Mayfield,  1st street in the Abbeyhill colonies after Easter road. Said station had a big hut in the back green of the tenements in east Norton & West Norton place. It contained a full-size snooker table used by the firemen in the 1960's and possibly later. The shop on the corner was Archie Buchanans, later Caseys which was re-named C's in later years.

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been here before
1 minute ago, argyjambo said:

I remember the fire station very well, as I grew up in Mayfield,  1st street in the Abbeyhill colonies after Easter road. Said station had a big hut in the back green of the tenements in east Norton & West Norton place. It contained a full-size snooker table used by the firemen in the 1960's and possibly later. The shop on the corner was Archie Buchanans, later Caseys which was re-named C's in later years.

 

There you go. Cleared that up.

 

Archie Buchanan

 

 

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Maroon Sailor
1 hour ago, been here before said:

 

There you go. Cleared that up.

 

Archie Buchanan

 

 

 

Played in the greatest ever Hibs team as well and I have never heard of him until now !

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3 hours ago, Stuart Lyon said:

SUTOL - thanks should have looked at the old NLS maps.

 

This must have been the old fire house 

Sciennes_Houses.png

Opposite this the Original Jewish cemetery.

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Oldest Jewish cemetery in Edinburgh. Oldest tombstone may date from 1832. Sciennes House Place (formerly Braid Place Cemetery):

"In 1816 a piece of land was purchased in Braid Place (now Sciennes House Place) and became the first Jewish Cemetery in Scotland.

 

Three historic places within yards of each other Braid Police Station , Fire Station and Cemetery.

Plus in 1786 the only meeting between Sir Walter Scott and Rabbie Burns took place in house next to Fire Station.

 

jew.png

Edited by FORTHCLYDE
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