Tag Archives: 1970

Turner’s Bakery

Bakery that was at 33 Upper Green East, where they had a shop and, up to the 1970s, did deliveries around Mitcham by horse and cart. The Turner family had been in the bakery business for almost 200 years.

Clip from 1969 photo by Bill Rudd, reproduced by kind permission of the Merton Historical Society.

The Bill Rudd collection of photos taken in October 1968 on the Merton Historical Society website includes the delivery horses:

See also article from 1968: Turner’s Bakery horse Lizzie retires

Clip of photo taken by Eric Montague in 1970. Reproduced by kind permission of the Merton Historical Society. Image reference mhs-em-mbw-11. The photo appears in Eric Montague’s book Mitcham Histories : 6 Mitcham Bridge, The Watermeads and the Wandle Mills, on page 70.

1953

The bakery stopped using horses in 1973, as told in this article from the Mitcham News and Mercury, 10th August 1973.

A change of horse power after two hundred years

SALLY the famous horse used by Turners, the Mitcham bakery, has delivered her last loaf of bread. She’s been driven off the streets, together with stable mates Billy and Brandy, because of the rising costs of their own staple food, hay and oats. After nearly 200 years, Turners, one of Merton’s oldest bakeries, have decided that the four footed deliveries of bread and cakes are getting too expensive.

So the three horses have had to go and will be replaced by vans to cover the five mile routes where they were firm favourites with housewives, old folk, children, and gardeners.

During the last two years the firm have tried to ignore the steadily rising prices of feed and shoe-ing because their horses and carts were a tradition and good public relations.

“But in the last few months these have shot up no much in price, shoe-ing has doubled in price for example, that we just can’t afford them any more” said general manager, Mr Ken Turner.

“It’s very sad. I know everyone wilt miss them. I will myself after all these years of keeping horses I’m 60 per cent baker and 40 per cent horse-man.

“The kids loved to feed them and they loved their work. When they went on holiday they often fretted to come back. But they are just not economic any more.”

The three were stabled at the back of the bakery at Fair Green and daily covered most of Mitcham between them.

“There was also the problem that the men who used to drive them have recently retired and its difficult to find young men willing to learn to drive a horse and cart” said Mr Turner.

The firm have always used horses for deliveries to customers, although a fleet of vans has also covered routes between the four shops in the Mitcham area. Recently Turners, a family business since 1792, was taken over by Spillers.

“But the decision has had nothing to do with them. I think they are as sorry as we are. All the staff will miss them too,” said Mr Turner.

The three, Sally, (pictured above), Brandy and Billy are all aged between 12 and 14 years-old. Last year Sally surprised the firm by producing a foal as a momentoe of a holiday romance the previous year.

Now the three have been stabled with some friends of Mr Turner’s at Epsom where they will work in a riding school.

Video showing how to find the Bill Rudd photos:

Comments on this video:

I used to buy my Mum cakes from Turner’s when I was in trouble, as a kid, and picked up sandwiches from Turner’s for my colleagues in the 1970s – we worked at Express Dairies Distribution in Beddington Lane (which had no canteen) . I used to ring in from a phone box EVERY day to take people’s orders. Incidentally, “Babes ‘n’ Tots” was a shop that sold everything from nappy pins to prams – and they probably closed down when my Mum stopped having kids! Best Wishes -and thanks for the memories – from Chatham

From a former resident of Mitcham, now living in Thailand:

The Turners’ bread cart used to come along Lammas Avenue where we lived! As a kid I was allowed to sit on the cart’s driving bench. There was a small Hovis type loaf on the seat! I took a bite. Later the driver saw the bite I had taken and ‘clipped my ear’ and sent me away! Naughty boy I guess! Greetings from Thailand.

1970 : Pollards Hill Estate rents for new 5-person houses too high

Rents of about £9 plus a week which will be charged on soon to be completed homes in the new Pollards Hill Housing Estate are being scoffed at by council tenants.

Tenants at present living in overcrowded conditions are being given the opportunity to move to future new homes on the 850-dwellings estate. However, the common reaction is ”These rates are too high by far – we can’t move unless they are brought down.”

The higher rents come in as a part of the rent structure for new tenancies – based on 210% of gross value on houses and 185% on flats – brought in by Merton Council.

Borough Housing Manager Mr A.A. Brown said 1,000 tenants had so far been invited to move into the new Pollards Hill Estate when their five and six person houses and flats become available.

Small response

“But the response of people interested in moving has been small,” he said.

Mr Brown was confident, however, that no flats or houses on the new development will be left empty when they were completed by the summer of 1971.

“I am sure they will be quickly occupied from the council waiting list.”

Among the existing tenants who have been given the opportunity of moving is 42 year old printer Mr John Uren.

Father of a teenage son and daughter, he would be entitled to move into a new 3-bedroom house from his four-guinea-a-week, two bedroom flat on the post-war estate at Pollards Hill.

“But I doubt I if I shall accept the offer – anyone who would pay £9 a week rent could just as well by their own new home,” Mr Uren said.

And Pollards Hill Estate tenants Association secretary Mr Dennis Small said these are not rents for ordinary council tenants at all – the council are only catering for people with big incomes. To pay the kind of rents the council asking for their new homes, a man would need to earn up to £40 a week.”

The new rents for a strongly opposed by the council’s labour minority. Said Councillor D.W. Chalkley, sole Labour representative on the housing committee: “With better handling of the housing account, these new tenancy rents could have been contained within the existing structure, which the Government would not have permitted to be raised.

“With such high rates, most people are quite naturally scared off.”

Merton’s letter inviting overcrowded tenants to move to Pollards Hill drew attention to the recently improved rent rebate scheme.

Prefer to pay

“But most tenants would prefer to pay their way rather than hope they will continue to qualify for rebates,” Councillor Chalkley commented.

“And, in any case, the present scheme where one council tenant subsidises another is wrong – it should be spread evenly amongst all ratepayers.”

Official opening of the first to five person houses at Pollards Hill will be carried out by Mitcham MP Mr Robert Carr, January 28.