Hungerford Arcade Welcome Home REME

WELCOME HOME FROM AFGHANISTAN
6TH BATTALION REME
What a fabulous day we had when the 6th Battalion REME came to Hungerford.  The soldiers were so organised it was quite spell binding.  They came to town and set everything up just like they would a military operation. They bought their amazing vehicles, guns of all types, special clothing and more. It was brilliant and everyone was thrilled by it all.  The children all had treats and were truly mesmerised by everything going on around them.  Some even tried on the special protection vests, helmets and were shown how some of the guns worked.  All the soldiers were very friendly and enjoyed talking and answering questions.

The parade started from the War Memorial at 1.30 precisely, travelled along Priory Road and then down the High Street to the Town Hall where the salute was taken by General Sir Mike Jackson to the accompaniment of the Hungerford Town Band playing the Regimental March.  After the salute the soldiers turned into Church Street where the Library car park became a parade ground where the soldiers were joined by their wives and families. The soldiers looked every bit the British Army as they marched proudly through the High Street. The crowds came early and lined both sides of the road, cheering on the troops as they marched through the town. 
Rita



HUGE 34 Ton Support Vehicle Recovery
This is a much loved vehicle known affectionately
by her crew as “Rufty Tufty”
Sgt. Swatheridge lived in her for 28 day in Afghanistan!

Proud Charlie Ogilvy
8 years old on Monday 10.2.14
Captain Gemma Smith with
Hungerford Arcade co-owner
Adrian Gilmour

Stuart Durie of Armouries
All Army Weapons Systems

Rita and L/Cpl. Kenan Dervisoglu

L-R Stuart Durie, the Bellman of Hungerford
Rita and Cpt. Gemma Smith

The Crowds lined Hungerford High Street

The Crowds lining Hungerford High Street

The Crowds lining Hungerford High Street

6TH Battalion REME
marching to the Town Hall where
General Sir Mike Jackson will take the salute

For the latest edition of our Newsletter, please go to our website at www.hungerfordarcade.co.uk

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Hungerford Arcade Royal Enfield Bullet

ROYAL ENFIELD
500cc BULLET

What a wonderful surprise we had when a young man, Jack Shackleton (I love his name) arrived at Hungerford Arcade on a stunning, black 500cc Royal Enfield Bullet motorbike.  It was obviously his pride and joy and people just could not help but stop and admire it.  This beauty took us all back to a bygone age when Royal Enfield and many other great British motorbikes were on our roads.
Jack spent four months in India and travelled around the country on a Royal Enfield.  He then went on to Thailand for two months, but could not stop thinking of the beloved Royal Enfield he left behind in India.  Jack is now home and two weeks ago, his dream came true when he purchased a beautiful Royal Enfield Bullet 500.  You will see from the photographs its a match made in Heaven!
Rita
L-R Hungerford Arcade co-owner Adrian Gilmour
Our very own Penny Browne and
proud owner, Jack Shackleton

Had to have by picture taken with lovely Jack
and his Royal Enfield Bullet

Adrian feeling very nostalgic

Adrian would love to go for a ride!

Royal Enfield Bullet 500

You can still buy a Royal Enfield as it is now being made in India as was this beauty.
Catch up with all the latest news in our Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.co.uk



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Hungerford Arcade: Welcome Soldiers Back From Afghanistan

HUNGERFORD ARCADE 
WELCOMES HOME
SOLDIERS FROM AFGHANISTAN
SATURDAY, 8TH FEBRUARY
PARADE STARTS AT 1.30 pm

All the staff and stallholders at Hungerford Arcade are proud to welcome home the 6th Battalion REME.  There will much to see so do come along and support our very brave men and women on the 8th February.
Rita

Some 250 soldiers from the 6th Battalion REME will be marching through Hungerford in a Homecoming Parade this Saturday, 8th February.  The parade will start from the War Memorial Gardens at 1.30 pm, travel along Priory Road and then down the High Street to the Town Hall where a salute will be taken by General Sir Mike Jackson to the accompaniment of the Hungerford Town Band playing the Regimental March.  There will be much to see. Welcome them home with a big cheer!

General Sir Mike Jackson

For all the latest news go to out Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.co.uk



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Hungerford Arcade Cow & Gate

Another very interesting piece of food history 
at HungerfordArcade.  Hope you like it.
Rita
                      COW & GATE

In 1904 Dr. Killick Millard, medical officer of health for Leicester, asked the company to supply powdered milk to help feed children of poor families. In 1908, the resultant high-protein “Cow & Gate Pure English Dried Milk” was first marketed on a large scale. In 1924 the company developed a special export version for tropical climates, and from this time registered the secondary Dried Milk Products Company Ltd to commercially wholesale various dried milk products to commercial food manufacturers. Renaming the entire company Cow & Gate in 1929.
Rare Cow & Gate
“Baby’s Money Box”

 During the 1930s, Cow & Gate worked with medical clinicians to scientifically develop specialised formulas to cater to infants with special needs, including:
  • Frailac: for premature infants

  • Allergiac: for babies sensitive to certain constituents of cow’s milk

  • Cereal food designed to start babies on mixed feeding at an earlier age

For all the news and articles read the latest edition of our Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.co.uk

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Hungerford Arcade Force Foods Record


FORCE FOODS

At Hungerford Arcade, we are no strangers to the rare and wonderful artifacts that relate to the food industry.  Here is a little gem which I am sure you will find interesting.
Rita

Force, first produced in 1901 by Force Food Company, one of three American companies owned by Edward Ellsworth was advertised using a popular cartoon figure called Sunny Jim. Force was the first commercially successful wheat flake cereal. The product was cheap to produce and had a good shelf life.

The first advertising copy for the new product described the cereal as “The Food That is all Food”, the advertising images showed rosy-cheeked children, and it was sold in a box decorated with images of muscular men wrestling with chains. Perhaps because it was not initially targeted at a well defined market, it did not sell well.
In late 1901 Minnie Maud Hanff, a freelance jingle writer, invented the character Jimmy Dumps, a morose character who on eating the cereal was transformed into Sunny Jim. Dorothy Ficken produced line drawings, and Hanff produced light hearted jingles describing Sunny Jim’s transformation. The advertisements appeared in magazines, on billboards, and on the sides of urban trolley cars from May 1902 through to the fall.
The campaign was wildly successful. Force was originally produced in a single plant in Buffalo, but by early 1904 the Canadian Grocer reported that there was one more Force food mill in Buffalo, a third mill in Chicago and one in Hamilton, Ontario, producing a total of 360,000 packages per day.

Force Foods Sunny Jim’s Record
Old Kentucky Home

For all the latest news and what’s on, read our Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.co.uk

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Hungerford Arcade BBC Bargain Hunt Day Two

BBC BARGAIN HUNT
AT 
HUNGERFORD ARCADE
DAY TWO
S6300055

Beautiful Kate Bateman


We had another fabulous day at Hungerford Arcade with the BBC filming more episodes of Bargain Hunt.  Tim Wonnacott, Kate Bateman and Nick Hall were, as always, on good form. The filming of Bargain Hunt is very serious as they have to work to very tight schedules.  Just as you see it on television. The two teams (Red and Blue) get just one hour each to find their three items.  

 

S6300053

Lovely Nick Hall

After much hunting, for each item found they have to get their expert, Kate or Nick to explain the history and advise as to whether or not it will make a profit at auction. They then have to negotiate the price and finally, purchase the item.  The clock only stops for short breaks throughout the day and starts up again precisely where they left off.  Some cut it very fine leaving less than a minute to purchase their third item!   It is fascinating and a privilege to be a part of this amazing experience.

 


The customers love it and some get very excited seeing the making of one of their favourite antiques shows.  I must say, the teams were great fun, making us all laugh.  

 

 

S6300059

The Grand Finale Manager Alex Rogers, Kate, Nick and me (Rita)

You will see some of the off-screen fun we had at the end of the day with Kate and Nick when we all said good bye.  

 

 

 

 

 

We are looking forward to welcoming the BBC back to the Arcade later in the year.
Rita

 

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Hungerford Arcade: BBC Bargain Hunt

BBC BARGAIN HUNT 
IS FILMING AT
 HUNGERFORD ARCADE

What a fabulous day we are having at Hungerford Arcade. As I type, the BBC are downstairs filming Bargain Hunt.  The atmosphere is brilliant and the customers are enthralled at being behind the scenes and actually seeing for themselves the making of one of their favourite antiques programmes, Bargain Hunt.   Host, Tim Wannacott is his lovely debonair self.  We have antiques experts Kate Bateman and Nick Hall each giving help and advice to their own team in choosing which three items they should buy for the showdown at the auction.  Any money that is left over from the £300 each team is given is then handed over to the expert who, in turn, purchases an item which he/she feels will make a profit for their team.  The team that makes the most profit is declared the winner and they get to keep the profits from the sale of their items.  But, it could all hinge on the expert’s item. If a team is doing badly and decide to go with the item, this could turn the tables and decide the winner.  On the other hand, if you are doing well, you could boost your profits by again, accepting your expert’s item or, potentially lose all the profit made on your three items if it does badly.   That is the name of the game.  As with all auctions it depends who is there on the day!  
Rita

Bargain |Hunt Host
Tim Wonnacott



Nick Hall with his Blue Team

The BBC film crew

Junk Shop Stallholder, Louise Rogers
They spent a long time filming in here!

Going off to lunch now – see you later!

Kate Bateman with the Red Team
Sarah and Chris Owen


Don’t forget to read the latest edition of our Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.co.uk


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Hungerford Arcade Old English Coins

There is no end to the talent at Hungerford Arcade and manager, Alex Rogers is no exception.  He has written a wonderful article on old English coins which I hope you enjoy as much as I did.
Rita

OLD ENGLISH COINS


As with all shops, coins are a big part of our lives here at Hungerford Arcade. We can handle hundreds in a day, sometimes taking them as payment, sometimes selling them to collectors and sometimes giving them away to our younger customers! Children who come into the Arcade to wander around with their parents are thrilled to be presented with an old English penny, halfpenny, farthing or even a sixpence to put into their treasure collection! Along with the coin there is a small leaflet explaining that you need 12 pence to a shilling and a shilling is a new 5p piece. But this doesn’t come close to a full explanation of the old monetary system that their parents and grandparents were so used to.  Since I was handing out so many of these coins, and being too young to have actually used them as money (I’m just approaching the ripe old age of 28) I decided to find out a little bit more about them.  So without going into too much detail, I am going to give a brief but hopefully interesting history of the origins of the pre-decimal system.   

As most of you will know, the old English monetary system was split into three basic groups: pounds, shillings and pence, with pence breaking down further into halfpence and farthings, (farthings were a quarter of a penny).  There were 12 pence to a shilling and 20 shillings to a pound. Which means there had to be 240 pence in a pound! Pretty confusing for children these days!

I was always confused when I saw old price tags, maybe on an old record or a book of my Dad’s and it would say something like 2/6d. I understood that it meant 2 shillings and 6 pence, but until recently I didn’t know why a penny was indicated by a letter ‘d’.  The system, sometimes referred to as the L.S.D system, is older than you might think. The abbreviation comes from the Latin names of the equivalent coins that were used in the Roman Empire: libra, solidus and denarius, which we took and renamed pounds, shillings and pence. That is where the letter ‘d’ comes from and also where the pound sign (£) comes from. It is a decorative letter L with a crossbar or two to show that it is being used as a sign, not a letter. The shilling was denoted with a forward slash / which is just a letter ‘s’ in shorthand.  The denarius, derived from a word meaning “containing ten”, was a small silver coin equal to ten asses or small bronze coins. 12 denarii were equal to 1 Solidus, a gold coin, and from one Libra (pound-weight) of silver, you could cut 240 denarii.  This method of coinage was popular across Europe until the fall of the western Roman Empire in around 400 AD.

Reintroduced by Charlamagne in the 8thcentury the system stuck and was widely used throughout much of the world for hundreds of years and right up until 1971 in Great Britain.  For somebody as young as me, who has grown up on hundreds, tens and units, it is difficult to imagine having to add up prices quickly in my head while shopping using the old system, especially when there were so many different ways to express the amount of money. Do you remember what you could buy for a tanner? Or half a bar?  2 and 6 is half a crown, a shilling is a bob and 2 shillings is a florin or a 2 bob bit! 5 shillings is a crown and 20 shillings is a pound.  And to make it even more confusing a guinea is 21 shillings! The guinea coin was last struck in 1799 but horses are sometimes still sold in guineas. Auctioneers would often sell an item and receive guineas and the seller would then, in turn, receive pounds, leaving the remaining shillings as commission for the auction house.

Now, almost worthless, the old English copper coinage going back a hundred or more years is what we hand out to the children that come into the Arcade everyday in the hope that they will treasure it and maybe, look it up to find out the history of the coins they hold in their hands.
Alex Rogers



 Hungerford Arcade
With Compliments
Half crown, or 2 shillings and 6 pence (2/6),
About 12p
Florin, or 2 shillings
(2/-), equivalent to 10p
One shilling (1/-)
became 5p in 1972
Sixpence (6d)
Became 2 ½ p
Threepenny Bit (3d)
About 1 ½ p

An old penny (1d)
About ½ p
A ha’penny (1/2 d)
About a quarter of a new penny

                                                This is a copy of the slip that each child 
                                                 receives in the wallet with his/her coin

For news, articles and what’s on see the latest copy of our monthly Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.co.uk


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Hungerford Arcade Manager On BBC Radio Berkshire

BBC RADIO BERKSHIRE
THE MIKE READ SHOW

Every day at the Arcade is different and you never know what exciting moment is going to occur, but more often than not, it just comes out of the blue!  Today, our manager, Alex Rogers had a phone call from BBC Radio Berkshire inviting him on to the Mike Read Show.  Alex did not know what to expect as he was not briefed.

Mike started off by asking Alex questions about Hungerford Arcade and how it is doing.  How it felt to win the BBC Homes and Antiques Best Antiques Centre Award in 2012 and various other questions.  Then to Alex’s surprise, Mike started the Mike Read 20 Questions!!! You must listen to the show on BBCi Player  (1.00 pm to 3.00 pm) it is brilliant.  Alex recovered so wonderfully, you would never have known he was unprepared.
Rita

Alex and Mike Read on the
BBC Radio Berkshire Mike Read Show
broadcast Live from Hungerford Arcade

 

Alex dressed for the Hungerford
Victorian Extravaganza event in December
Wow!


For all the news, read the latest edition of our Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.co.uk

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Hungerford Arcade: Farewell Dear Friend

DAVID FULLER
R.I.P 
23.06.24 – 04.01.2014

It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of  our very dear friend, David Fuller on Friday, 4thJanuary 2014. David loved Hungerford Arcade (wife Betty and daughter Sarah Jane are stallholders here).

We send our sincere condolences to David’s wife Betty, daughter Sarah Jane and all the family Our thoughts are with them at this very sad time.
Adrian, Hazel, Staff and Stallholders



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