Memory Lane – Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths

There was something for everyone at Woolworths stores, which were found on High Streets in towns and cities throughout England and Wales.

Affectionately known as “Woolies”, these stores were like Aladdin’s Cave. They stocked a wide range of goods that attracted customers of all ages who came from all walks of life. Among the things you could buy were toys and games, chocolate and sweets, pop records, portable radios, car accessories, household paint, stationery and stamps, electric fires, fan heaters, garden furniture and plants.

Everyone who shopped at Woolworths will have memories of their local store. If you and your family shopped at “Woolies” in Newcastle-under-Lyme, please share your memories with us and tell us the things you bought.

NSH.2025

sabrina's avatarWoolies Buildings - Then and Now

96 High Street (formerly Penkhull Street), Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffs ST5 1QF

The 300th Woolworths store opened in 1928 on Penkhull Street in a timber-framed building. At some point Penkhull Street was renamed ‘High Street’.

Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1930s Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1930s

Source: BBC

After WW2 the ‘3d and 6d’ was dropped from the fascia so it read ‘F. W. Woolworth’.

Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1950s Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1950s

Source: Age Photo Stock

In the 1950s a zebra crossing was put on the road directly in front of Woolworths.

Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1950s Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1950s

Source: Pinterest

Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1950s Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1950s

Source: Magnolia Box

In presumeably 1960s, Woolworths had a major makeover. They demolished the original timber-framed building and built a two-floor superstore that took the whole of the corner plot. It went all the way to the other end of Friar Street where there was another entrance.

Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1965 Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1965

In the 1970s, the logo was updated on the fascia.

Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1970s Newcastle-under-Lyme Woolworths 1970s

Source:

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Memory Lane – Stafford Woolworths

sabrina's avatarWoolies Buildings - Then and Now

18 Market Square, Stafford

Woolworths opened their 320th store  in Stafford on 23rd June 1928. It was at 18 Market Square, in a building full of character. You can see the store on the right here, next to the building works.

Stafford Woolworths 1934 Stafford Woolworths 1934

Source: Staffordshire Past Track

In 1962, it was intended for Woolworths to move to a bigger purpose-built store at Gaolgate Street and for the Market Square store to close. (Source: Soult’s Retail View)

The store number of 320 was transferred to the new store. But for some reason Woolworths decided to keep the old store open. With the store number given to the new branch, the Market Square store had to be assigned a new number, and that was store number 1067. You can see the original store open in this 1972 photo.

Stafford Woolworths (Market Square) 1972

Stafford Woolworths (Market Square) 1972

Source: Stoke on Trent Live

The Market…

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Memory Lane – Stoke-upon-Trent Woolworths

sabrina's avatarWoolies Buildings - Then and Now

6-8 Majestic Buildings, Campbell Place, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffs 

Woolworths opened in Stoke-on-Trent in 1928. Two other Stoke-on-Trent stores already existed at Hanley and Longton. This third one opened at 6-8 Majestic Buildings, which we know thanks to Graham Soult‘s research. You can see the small store on the far right of this photo. The building on the far left was the Majestic Cinema, and in front are concrete shelters for cinema-goers to be protected from the rain when queuing.

Stoke-on-Trent Woolworths 1957 Stoke-on-Trent Woolworths 1957

12 – 14 Campbell Place, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffs ST4 1LY

In the 1957, quite soon after the above photo was taken, Woolworths acquired the cinema and demolished it to building a new, bigger store. The rather ugly concrete shelters were kept – they were then used as bus shelters.

Stoke on Trent Woolworths 1960s Stoke on Trent Woolworths 1960s

Source: Facebook

In the below 1963 photo, you can see the new Woolworths store in…

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Memory Lane – Burslem Woolworths

sabrina's avatarWoolies Buildings - Then and Now

17-19 St John’s Square, Burslem, Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire ST6 3AN

Woolworths opened in Burslem in September 1929 in a purpose-built two-storey building. According to the book Burslem Through Time by Mervyn Edwards, the first store manager was L.H. Hewitt. This branch of Woolworths stocked a range of locally manufactured china and pottery items.

Burslem Woolworths 1930s Burslem Woolworths 1930s

Source: Historic England

In 1966 the store was modernised – this photo was taken just after the store reopened. Doors were moved to the left, and inside you can see signage on the walls saying ‘Quality Foods’ and ‘Frozen Foods’. The store was quite long inside.

Burslem Woolworths 1966Burslem Woolworths 1966

Source: Seaton, P.

Burslem Woolworths 1994 Burslem Woolworths 1994

Source: Burslem Through Time – Edwards, M.

Burslem Woolworths 2000 Burslem Woolworths 2000

Source: The Potteries

The store lasted until the end, closing on 2nd January 2009.

Burslem Woolworths 2008 Burslem Woolworths 2008

Source: The Potteries

It became a Poundstretcher for a few years…

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Memory Lane – Leek Woolworths

Woolworths stores were located on the High Street in towns and cities throughout North Staffordshire and South Cheshire. Affectionately known as “Woolies,” they were like an Aladdin’s Cave and carried a wide range of stock at reasonable prices.

sabrina's avatarWoolies Buildings - Then and Now

13 Market Place, Leek, Staffs ST13 5AA

Woolworths opened in Leek in 1931 in a former hotel. You can see it in the below photo from the 1990s. If you are wondering what is going on it this photo, it’s the Leek Fire Brigade attempting a Guinness book of records event. They had to cut a car up and pass each piece through a tyre in the quickest time.

Leek Woolworths 1990s Leek Woolworths 1990s

Source: Maycock, N.

Leek Woolworths 2004 Leek Woolworths 2004

Source: Emily and James

This Woolworths lasted until the end, closing in December 2008.

Leek Woolworths 2008 Leek Woolworths 2008

Source: Kidd, C.

It became Yorkshire Trading Company, and if you look a bit closer you will spot the Woolworths doors still in use.

Leek Former Woolworths Leek Former Woolworths

Source: Kington, J.

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Memory Lane – Uttoxeter Woolworths

sabrina's avatarWoolies Buildings - Then and Now

16 – 18 High Street, Uttoxeter, Staffordshire ST14 7HY

Woolworths opened in Uttoxeter in 1932 in a purpose-built store on the High Street.

Uttoxeter Woolworths c1955 Uttoxeter Woolworths c1955

The store manager from 1933 was Mr Slade, and this photo was sent in by Richard Northover who actually met him many decades later. He shares his memories with us below.

Uttoxeter Store Manager 1930s Uttoxeter Store Manager 1930s

“His name is Mr R J Slade known as ‘Jim’ who retired from Store 60 Cheltenham in the early 1960s. I met him in 1979 when I was a trainee manager at Store 60. I got to know him when another trainee manager at the store was going out with a couple of the girls who worked in the store, one of whom was his granddaughter Vanessa who later married the other trainee. We used to talk when he came into the store, a kindly old gentleman talking to…

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Memory Lane – Stone Woolworths

sabrina's avatarWoolies Buildings - Then and Now

32 High Street, Stone, Staffs ST15 8AW

Woolworths opened in Stone in 1934. It opened in an existing building on the High Street.

Stone-Woolworths-1965 Stone Woolworths 1965

Source: Francis Frith

They traded from this location for 74 years until the end in December 2008. The pillar at the front looks really thin.

Stone-Woolworths-2009 Stone Woolworths 2009

It became a Heron Foods.

Stone Former Woolworths Stone Former Woolworths

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Tomato to the Face: The Use of Stocks in Derbyshire

There were two sets of stocks in Tunstall in the 1840s. One set was in front of the steps leading to the market hall on the ground floor of the Courthouse in Market Square (Tower Square). The other set of stocks was outside the Police Station in High Street.

tameracarrington's avatarBuxton Museum and Art Gallery

As a Museum Assistant who once got sent outsideof her primary school classroom for making a full stop too big, I am well-versed with just and fair punishment. With this in mind, this blog will be exploring the past use of stocks in towns and villages near Buxton to deter misbehaviour and facilitate punishment.

Derbyshire is home to several village stocks,scattered throughout its picturesque villages. The stocks at Chapel-en-le-Frith, for instance, are said to date from the Cromwellian period and are located on the town’s historic Market Place. The stocks currently viewable to visitors and residents, however, date from the eighteenth century. As the stocks are made from woodthey are naturally subject to decay and rotting, thus have been replaced overtime.

Photograph of the Old Stocks at Chapel-en-le-Frith. Acc. No. DERSB : PC 436.

Since the medieval period to the nineteenth century, stocks have been used to…

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Hanley’s First Library

A bookseller, James Strapham, opened Hanley’s first library in 1790.

Called the Pottery Subscription Library, the library was a commercial venture which James ran from his bookshop. He charged customers two guineas to join the library and a guinea a year to borrow books.

In 1796, James sold the bookshop and the library to John Allbut, whose son Thomas acquired them at the beginning of the 19th century. Thomas ran the library until he retired on December 31st, 1852 when its books were transferred to the Mechanics Institution’s library in Gitana Street.

Shortly afterwards, the Mechanics Institution left Gitana Street and moved to new premises in Pall Mall.

Memory Lane – Tunstall Woolworths

Until they closed in 2009, Woolworths stores dominated the High Street in Britain’s small towns and cities.

Affectionately known as “Woolies”, they sold a wide range of goods ranging from children’s toys and sweets to tins of paint and cutlery. Prices were reasonable and Woolworths attracted customers from all walks of life. If you and your family went shopping at Woolworths in Tunstall, please share your memories of shopping there with us. We look forward to hearing from you. Our email address is northstaffordshireheritage@outlook.com