Tag Archives: Fair Green

Speedway Shoe Repair Service

Shoe repair shop that was at 5 Upper Green West, Mitcham.

Clip of photo taken by Eric Montague in 1972. Reproduced by kind permission of the Merton Historical Society. Image reference mhs-em-ug-28

In the 1971 phone book the number was 01-648 8821.

ad from the 1987 Mitcham Diary

clip from 1962 photo on Merton Memories, copyright London Borough of Merton.

1952 OS map

Ricky posted this photo of himself by his dad’s van, on the Mitcham History group on Facebook. His father worked as a shoe repairer at Speedways, and his mother worked there as well as a supervisor.

I contacted Ricky via Facebook who gave more information about the shop:

I’m not sure when it closed down was still there late 90s.

The reason it was called Speedway was because Uncle George Yianarri, who was the owner, was into his Speedway (wasn’t a pro). He knew all the riders and they came to the shop to have their boots and leathers repaired, they wore football boots in those days with studs removed and a metal plate fixed to the left one. Uncle George used to take me to Wimbledon stadium when I was a boy, we used to get in for nothing and let me sit on Ronnie Moore bike and Barry Briggs. Speedway shops were in a few towns, Mitcham, Colliers Wood, Putney, Old Kent Road, Tooting Market, Wimbledon.


Maps are reproduced with the permission of the National Library of Scotland.

1961 obituary of Jack Gillard, newsvendor at Fair Green since 1920

From the Mitcham News & Mercury, 10th March 1961

NEWSVENDOR JACK DIES

Sixty-nine-year-old Jack Gillard, who died suddenly in hospital on Tuesday (7th March 1961), was one of Mitcham’s more famous landmarks.

For 41 years, he had sold newspapers at Fair Green, and was known by thousands of local people.

Mr. Gillard, of Henry Prince Estate, Earlsfield, had been in poor health for some time and had not been at his usual pitch for about four months.

He often talked about the changes in the district since he became a newsvendor in 1920.

“When I first moved in to Mitcham – I lived in Love Lane – it was like a small country village,” he would recall.

And he remembered shouting the big news over the years . . . The General Strike, the R101 disaster, the outbreak of war, the first atom bomb over Japan . . .

Three years ago Jack had a serious accident and later a leg was amputated. He was fitted with an artificial limb.

For years he tried to persuade Mitcham Council to let him put up a covered stand, but was never successful.

Jack Gillard