says, # she s got more. bottle than a dog with rabies. no she has more bite than a dog with rabies, she has more bottle than united dairies. make a proper list. this is fun about the dairies. make a proper list. this is fun about the rolling dairies. make a proper list. this is fun about the rolling stones, - dairies. make a proper list. this is| fun about the rolling stones, there are superfans and superfans. this man is matt and he has spent millions of pounds on memorabilia of thing are stones. he has seen them 200 times in 28 countries, spent millions on his collection. he is from london and he is matt lee, apparently the greatest rolling stones fan and holds the guiness world record for having the biggest collection of stones memorabilia. last week there were some lovely
The tale of a local dairyman and cowkeeper
Posted by Hugh on May 6, 2021 at 20:49 in History of Harringay
Nicholas Walker dairy cart, c1900. Given that a photo was being taken was probably a special event, I m assuming that this is Walker himself, perhaps with his son, Menoah, or perhpas a milk carrier boy - see newspaper article below. (Can anyone identify the road?)
Hornsey dairyman and cowkeeper Nicholas Walker was born in Necton, Norfolk in 1860. The youngest of six children, his father was the village glover. in the mid 1870s he moved to Finsbury Park where his older brother Menoah was running a dairy at 88 Mountgrove Road, on the corner of Finsbury Park Road.
The tale of a local dairyman and cowkeeper
Posted by Hugh on May 6, 2021 at 20:49 in History of Harringay
Nicholas Walker dairy cart, c1900. Given that a photo was being taken was probably a special event, I m assuming that this is Walker himself, perhaps with his son, Menoah, or perhpas a milk carrier boy - see newspaper article below. (Can anyone identify the road?)
Hornsey dairyman and cowkeeper Nicholas Walker was born in Necton, Norfolk in 1860. The youngest of six children, his father was the village glover. in the mid 1870s he moved to Finsbury Park where his older brother Menoah was running a dairy at 88 Mountgrove Road, on the corner of Finsbury Park Road.
Nigel Moore and his mum Pamela with their finds
- Credit: Nigel Moore
A Crouch End man says he was “absolutely amazed” to unearth an antique jug underneath his floorboards from the old Broadway creamery.
Nigel Moore, 50, made the discovery after opening a trapdoor and squeezing down into his cellar to find a collection including bottles, ceramics, tiles and shoes, which are believed to have been left there for at least a century.
The 50-year-old, who works as a driver for movie productions – both on screen and off – lives in Fairfield Road with his parents Pamela and Jack, who moved into the family home in 1968.