Images of the clothing and fashions of the day in the 1930s.
Alice Henderson sometime in the 1930s.
More detail »Fashionable bathing beauties strike a pose for the camera at Seaton Carew in August 1932.
More detail »Fashionable bathers at Seaton Carew in 1932.
More detail »The Coronation Carnival Queen, escorted by her attendants, in Lauder Street on 12th May, 1937. This view is taken looking west to Avenue Road.
HHT+N 29
More detail »West Hartlepool Cycling Club taking part in a procession for decorated cycles and scooters. They won the award for the largest banner by a cycling club in fancy dress. Coronation Procession, 12th May, 1937.
HHT+N 10
More detail »Council staff on the roof of the Municipal Buildings in May 1932.
More detail »Council Staff on the roof of the Municipal Buildings in May 1932. Mary Scurr is on the back row (centre), with Jeannie Lappin on the front row, right. Sitting next to her is Audrey Pailor (later Woods).
More detail »Council Staff in a chicken run on the roof of the Municipal Buildings in May 1932. Audrey Pailor (later Woods) is third from the left.
More detail »Council staff in a chicken run on the roof of the Municipal Buildings in 1932.
More detail »Council staff (with the exception of the Town Clerk and two others), on the roof of the Municipal Buildings in 1932.
More detail »Council staff on the roof of the Municipal Buildings in 1932, with an array of plant pots and troughs behind them.
More detail »On this image from 1938 we have from the front Arthur Smith in the splendid plus fours, Ethel Nicholson, Evelyn Dunnington, Raymond Nicholson and Mary Dunnington.
More detail »The fashions suggest the 1930s and these ladies are obviously awaiting some kind of fashion show in a department store. It could be Robinson's ? Hill Carter ? Gray Peverell ?
The photo has possibly been taken in a basement to one of these stores as the ceiling looks low and it could be a store room indicated by the stacked chairs above the ladies on the right. There also seem to be a number of mirrors arranged on the beams.
HHT+N 14
More detail »Young Harry Henderson with his mother Alice (formerly Scott), Alice's mother and grandfather, on the green at Seaton Carew, in the late 1930s.
More detail »Taken in 1937, the image is of Gertie Bowlt prior to her marriage to Ronald Chatterton. The picture is taken on the top of the old Municipal Buildings in Church Square where her father was caretaker and macebearer.
More detail »Taken around 1936 in the countryside near Hartlepool.
More detail »Harriet Chappell outside No. 50 Milton Road in 1938/39. Harriet was Manageress at the Seaton Bakery; there was also a shop in Hart Road (later Raby Road).
More detail »The Herring brothers John Frankland (Jack), and Kip (Alfred) sometime in the 1930s. Jack served on H.M.S. Dorsetshire, and was present during the hunt for the German battleship Bismarck. He was later killed when the Dorsetshire was bombed and sunk by Japanese aircraft in the Indian Ocean, in 1942.
More detail »My mother Katherine Jameson (Scott), a dressmaker of 103 Hart Road
By Joan Brown
My mother, Katherine Jameson, lived in West Hartlepool where her father was a Police Constable. She went to work as an apprentice milliner and dressmaker in 1906. The fashion was for large decorated hats, and the basic shape was made first in buckram, covered in cloth or velvet, and flowers and feathers finally added. Dresses and skirts were full length, frequently featuring small covered buttons down the front, and on the sleeves; all made by hand of course.
Mother was paid nothing during the first year and few shillings the second. She made all her own clothes and every evening sewed for her mother and three sisters, working by gaslight. The photograph was taken about 1911, mother is the girl wearing the turban and Russian style tunic. I love this photo, as it shows how fashion was being influenced by the Ballet Russe productions. Mother always followed fashion trends, and when we looked at old photographs of her, could always tell me what she was wearing at the time – “ that was a tussore silk coat, a Breton straw hat and Spanish leather shoes with silver buckles”.
In 1916 she borrowed £25 from her mother and set up her own shop and dressmaking business in Annfield Plain, living in one room at the back of the shop. In six months she had paid her mother back. This venture ended in 1919 after she had been ill in the flu epidemic. In 1921 she married my father, Charles Scott. They bought a newspaper and tobacconist shop in Poplar Grove. In 1931 when I was two they sold the shop and mother opened a hat and dress shop at 103 Hart Road, which ran successfully until mother retired in 1948. Dresses were altered free and hats re-trimmed to suit, with the help of Miss Annie Trotter, who worked for mother for many years.
Mother never used a pattern when cutting out a dress and all sewing was done on an old Singer treadle machine with a boat-shaped shuttle: an incredible workhorse, which would go smoothly from sewing georgette to leather. Clothes had to last a long time in those days and I remember one lady coming for a new hat and complaining that hers had faded. She had only been wearing it every day for five years! During the war, some hats were made from re-cycled old ones, and I remember mother holding all new stock up to the light to see if there were any holes in them. She used to go to Robinsons, a wholesaler in Newcastle, and I sometimes had a day off school to go with her as a treat.
Mother lived until a week before her 92nd birthday, and was still doing crochet and tatting. She only wore glasses to read, and never had a cataract; quite remarkable considering the amount of sewing she had done in poor light.
More detail »Taken in 1930, Norah (nee Connon) Readhead and Elsie (nee Readhead) Cook.
More detail »Mary Scurr sitting on the rocks at Hartlepool on September 6th, 1931.
More detail »Staff at the Morritt Arms, Greta Bridge. On the right is Hartlepool girl Annie Brownlee, a professional musician who was also the pianist at Hartlepool's Electric Theatre during the 1930s.
More detail »Kip Herring and Emma Herbert take a stroll along the seafront at Scarborough in 1938.
More detail »A group on the Green at Seaton Carew celebrating the Silver Jubilee of King George V in 1935. The children are wearing the medals handed out for the occasion. All are dressed in their best. Note the gentleman's trousers and the women's furs.
More detail »Jeannie Lappin out for a stroll with the dog in the Spring of 1931.
More detail »Jeannie Lappin modelling a striking Art Deco swimsuit at the Hartlepool Headland Outdoor Swimming Pool in 1931.
More detail »Henry and Alice Edna Henderson outside Stranton Church on their wedding day, July 3rd, 1934.
More detail »From the left- John Delafield, Mrs Calvert, Billy Calvert, Elsie Calvert (Johnson) Herbert Johnson, Mary Ann Johnson, Florence Johnson (later Delafield) Len Johnson, at Stranton in 1938.
More detail »The wedding group outside the Sandringham Road Presbyterian Church in 1939/40. The church is now the Hartlepool United Supporters Club.
Georgina Pike worked as Head Clerk at Binn's Department Store; Robina Brownlee was a nurse at Cameron's Hospital; Richard Fawcett was a coffin-maker for Simpson's and lived in Hart Road (old Hartlepool). His house was one of those damaged during the German Bombardment in 1914.