Tag Archives: 1960

Bamboo House

Chinese restaurant that was at 249 London Road, corner of Langdale Avenue, from 1960 to December 2021.

From the Daily Mirror, 8th April, 1965

The Chop Suey Revolution

In a thousand heated cellars all over Britain bean shoots are being grown.

About every five days, they are cut and cooked in Chinese restaurants to help feed the traditional fish-and-chips Englishman who has been contentedly swept into the chop suey revolution.

These been shoots threaten not only the traditional fish and chips. They can – added by today’s frightening meat prices – strike a blow at the equally traditional steak and chips market.

For years London has had its famous and expensive Chinese restaurants.

Now “eating Chinese” is sweeping not only London suburbia but the whole of the provinces – with restaurants which have the strange quality of being strictly classless.

In them you will find the bank manager, the solicitor, the dock worker, hungry teenagers and busy housewives all trying this new value-for-money way of eating.

There are nearly 2,000 Chinese restaurants in England today. There are 400 concentrated in the Midlands, 100 within a 40 mile radius of Manchester.

Why this chop suey revolution?

The immediate, but not the only, answer is that they are cheap, almost ridiculously cheap.

Where, outside the Chinese restaurant, can you get a delicious, satisfying, three-course meal, plus tea or coffee,
for as little as 4s. 6d., with no service charge.

Where, except in a Chinese restaurant, can you get a huge plateful of exquisite food, served on an immaculate tablecloth, in pleasant surroundings, for 3s.?

How can the Chinese provide meals so cheaply?

One of the reasons is the entirely different approach of the Chinese towards eating.

They rarely use any meat except pork and chicken. But these are so deliciously served with wonderfully flavoured vegetables – bean shoots, spring onions, tomatoes, celery, bamboo shoots, spinach and white cabbage – that nobody misses the traditional steak.

Then, of course, many restaurants save on labour costs, operating on a family basis.

It is not unusual to find grandparents, sons-in-law and daughters-in-law and cousins, all working together with no regard for working hours, wages or days off.

A wonderful example of this is in a modest Chinese restaurant in Mitcham, Surrey.

Here, in the “Bamboo House,” 45-year-old Mr. Pui Cheung opens seven days a week with members of his family as his chief assistants.

Mr. Cheung arrived in England eleven years ago by boat from Hong Kong with very little money in his pocket, and for six years he worked in restaurant kitchens and then as a waiter.

Five years ago he risked his savings and got a mortgage to open his Chinese restaurant.

Today he has paid off his mortgage and is saving hard to expand.

He regularly serves more than 300 4s. 6d. lunches between midday and 3 p.m.

He employs an 18-year-old boy, Lai Fong, solely to look after and grow fresh bean shoots from seed in huge wooden tubs in an immaculate transformed coal cellar.

He told me: “I often use 100lb. bean shoots on Saturday nights alone, and I can only keep pace with the demand by growing them on the premises.”

Most Chinese restaurants do the same — it’s handier and cheaper than buying outside.

The popularity and standard of food values can be judged by the fact that local housewives now collect Mr. Cheung’s three-course 4s. 6d. meals to take home for the family.

Shiu-King, the owner’s strikingly good-looking wife, supervises the kitchen. His elder son Ching Kwong is her deputy, his daughter-in-law, Choi King, is a waitress, his 21-year-old son Yick Kwan is the deputy chef and his 19-year-old daughter Oi-ling, is a waitress.

Inflation adjusted, four shillings and sixpence in 1965 is around £4 in 2016.

From the local Guardian, 30th March 2010

A pioneer of Asian cuisine in London, who opened Mitcham’s first Chinese restaurant, has died.

Pui Cheung was the owner of the Bamboo House in London Road. He was born in Hong Kong but later moved to Shanghai where he married his wife Siu King.

His grandson, Paul Cheung, said: “It was truly a family business as all concerned have helped change the way people dine out on Chinese food.”

Mr Cheung, who had four children, died on March 3 at the age of 90. A service to mark his life was held on March 18 in Morden.

From their Facebook Page on 8th December 2021:

Dear Customers,

Since 1960, Bamboo Restaurant has had the pleasure of serving you fresh and authentic Chinese cuisine.

We regret to inform you that our last day of business will be Christmas Eve, Friday 24th December 2021. We apologise for the short notice. Due to the expiry of our lease, we will have to close earlier than intended. We would like to take this opportunity to thank you — our wonderful customers — for all of your loyalty and support over the last 20 years under our management.

Our opening hours will remain the same until we close. Please call or email us to make a booking.

We wish you all the best for this Christmas & the coming new year and we hope to see you all before we close our doors for the last time.

Kind regards,

Peter, Paula, Linda, Nigel and everyone else at Bamboo Restaurant.

Home Radio

Shop that was established at 187 London Road (opposite Eagle House), in 1946 by brothers Alan and Colin Sproxton, using their service gratuities. The name “Home Radio” was suggested by their father.

September 1947 – the shop at 187 London Road, and their van. From the in house magazine of Murphy Radio Co., the Murphy News.


In 1955 Colin Sproxton took part in the Monte Carlo Rally.

Colin Sproxton in 1959 at the Monte Carlo Rally. Clip from Merton Memories photo reference Mit_​People_​124-1, copyright London Borough of Merton.


Home Radio initially sold electrical appliances, as shown in these adverts from 1960.


The business grew with selling components by mail order. According to an article in The Radio Constructor magazine (pdf), Home Radio and Mitcham became known all over the world.

Colin Sproxton retired in 1964, the year of this catalogue cover:

1964 Home Radio catalogue

The back cover of this catalogue showed how to get to their shop by public transport. The map also showed their service shop in Locks Lane.

Their 1968 components catalogue, was advertised in Practical Wireless magazine, and said that it was:

Used and acclaimed by scientists, engineers, technicians, teachers & students

1968 Practical Wireless magazine ad

In 1969 they moved to larger premises to cope with the need to store large amounts of components for the mail order business. They went to the top floor of a new office block at 234 – 240 London Road, which gave them 2,400 square feet of space. The business was being run by Alan Sproxton and Ernest Layton at this time.

The Radio Constructor magazine described the dinner that was held at The Grange on 23rd April 1969 to celebrate the expansion of the business. A guest at the dinner was an old friend of the Sproxton family, Mr B. Mund Hopen from Bergen in Norway, who was in charge of the Norwegian Shipping Mission during World War 2. Mr Sproxton, in his after-lunch speech said that it was his opinion that three things saved Britain from defeat: radar, the tenacity and courage of the RAF, and the Norwegian tanker fleet which came over to Britain.


The company was wound up in 1982, as recorded in the London Gazette:

HOME RADIO (COMPONENTS) LIMITED

“That it has been proved to the satisfaction of the Company that this Company cannot, by reason of its liabilities, continue its business and that it is advisable that the same should be wound up; and that the Company be wound up and that Keith John Chapman of 1-2 Pudding Lane, London EC3R 8AB, be and is hereby appointed as Liquidator of the Company for the purpose of such voluntary winding-up.”

A. Sproxton, Chairman