Sunday, May 3, 2026
Beryl's Mid-Century Adventures
Here are some of the results from my slide sorting and scanning efforts. These ten images are among my favorites so far.
What I'm trying to do here, as I've said before, is save significant pictures from going to the landfill, or being turned into craft projects, or otherwise disappearing. My hope is that putting them online, making them public, will allow all of us to enjoy them and help enrich our cultural record.
Above is the waterfront in Plymouth, in the area known as Plymouth Hoe, in the summer of 1980. You can't read it because of the low resolution of this blog image, but the original scan shows that the open-top bus is named the "Sir Francis Drake" and it's going to the City Center, the Mayflower Steps and along the sea front. Those little girls in the foreground remind me of the red-headed dolls that some bloggers feature in their posts.
It's exactly the kind of picture I like -- well-composed, with lots of people and evidence of the era in the cars and clothing.
"Pauline's Wedding -- Beryl" from 1966. Such a fashion statement! I have several pictures of Beryl in different outfits. She was poised and stylish enough to have been a model, and maybe she was.
"Pits at Le Mans," from 1970. Love all the old advertisements.
"Punch & Judy -- Chalfont St. Peter," from 1966.
There's no information on this slide, but it's obviously a Christmas dinner, with the crackers on the table and a cake or tart labeled "Merry Christmas." I'm guessing it's the early '60s. The man at right is holding a bottle of something called "Celebration Cream," which sounds disgusting but apparently was a type of Pedro Domecq sweet sherry popular in the mid-century. Or so Google tells me.
I think that's Beryl sitting next to the man with the bottle.
"Gill's wedding," from 1965. A veritable smorgasbord of '60s fashion. I especially like the elaborate hairstyle of the woman at rear left, and the look of despair on the face of the probably exhausted little girl.
"Devon, 1980" -- I thought the photographer's choice to put the donkey in the corner was pretty brilliant. Or maybe the donkey wandered into the picture?
"Lech, Austria" from 1965. There are quite a few slides from Lech which I think come from at least one family trip. I like the fact that eight people have managed to squeeze onto that bench, which hopefully did not give way beneath them.
There's no information on this slide, dated September 1972. I love her sunglasses and her beads and the air of happy summer holidays.
And finally, there are several pictures from this office, dated August 1971. I have no indication where it was or what type of business was being done, but I'm struck by the incredible quantities of paper and files and books. The days before computers!
As usual, my eventual goal will be to add these to an album on Flickr. As you can see, the camera attachment that allows me to photograph the slides, rather than paying to have them commercially scanned, works pretty well. Sometimes it takes me a couple of tries to get the image in the right place and correctly focused but I'm slowly figuring it out.










I love old photo's, everyone looks so smart, and ladies hats, I remember working in an office mid to late 70's, with binders everywhere for filing all the paperwork, and huge dial phones.
ReplyDeleteYes, I remember those office days too. In fact one of my first jobs was maintaining paper files of published articles, so reporters could go back and look at them later. No computerized archives!
DeleteBouffant hair, rigorously backcombed, I remember that. Beryl should definitely have been a model that hat is gloriously over the top!
ReplyDeleteIt is an amazing hat, isn't it?
DeleteI know that I am in the habit of mischievously ribbing you Steve - but on this occasion I just want to say - Well done...so far! You are doing a fine job with the slides and recapturing a sense of how people used to live and look in the not too distant past.
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked it! It is astonishing to look at those kids in the Punch & Judy picture and think they'd be in their mid-to-late sixties now.
DeleteThe photos are wonderful. The sixties suddenly seem so far away, but most of the time I feel like it was just yesterday.
ReplyDeleteStrange to think 1960 was 66 years ago!
DeleteYou have found some real treasures there, capturing the times so well.
ReplyDeleteAll those 'two piece suits' and hair and hats.
The women in suits really do look like a fashion plate.
DeleteOoh, Beryl was a very stylish lady!
ReplyDeleteWasn't she? I should scan some of the other shots of her as well.
DeleteA great first glimpse at what you have rescued so far! Love the 60s fashions, of course - reminds me of my very good-looking Mum at that time. Beryl‘s pink hat!!!
ReplyDeleteYes, that is quite a hat! I think part of the charm of pictures like this is that they are familiar, on some level, to all of us.
DeleteThese are wonderful. I love that you’re saving and sharing these. I hope someone recognizes people and contacts you. A treasure.
ReplyDeleteI have mixed feelings about that possibility, but I think the chance is very, very slim. Undoubtedly most of the people in the pictures (except the children) are dead or very old.
DeleteLove the photos and you have done well to capture the images using the new lens on your camera. We had one, but it never worked very well and eventually bought a flat bed scanner with a facility for scanning slides.
ReplyDeleteThe office looks very familiar to the Insurance Company I started work in, in 1973. Ring binders floor to ceiling to file copies of all the insured's policies. No computers and one phone between 2 desks. Happy Days though.
I'll see how pleased I am with this camera attachment over time. If it proves too difficult to work with I might take the plunge for a scanner as well.
DeleteThese are amazing. As now, back then middle class British women dressed so differently to US women. I was reminded of this by seeing the way Camilla dressed when visiting the US.
ReplyDeleteDid you note the black tags on the edge of the large book in the office photo? Probably an alphabetical index.
Not that Camilla is middle class!
DeleteGreat work Steve! And great pictures. I am looking forward to lots more!
ReplyDeleteI think the Lech trip could be an exchange thing. I know that since sometime in the 1960s many British secondary schools started partnerships with schools in Austria and Germany and it was usually the older students who went back and forth, always in groups - that's how I ended up for three gruesome months in Grimsby.
Lech is a popular tourist resort town in the Alps with easy access by road and lots of entertainment, just a short distance from a couple of German and Austrian cities with secondary schools. It's still very popular for school trips with many hostels and similar catering for groups.
At the xmas dinner, is Beryl sitting on someone's lap or has the man beside her a very long arm?
You may be right about Lech, though I have one picture with some adults there as well -- which is what made me think it was a family trip. In fact, I have a picture of Beryl in Lech!
DeleteBeryl's hat resemble the bathing cap my mother used to wear in the pool when I was a wee thing!
ReplyDeleteHa! It DOES look like a bathing cap!
DeleteThey are all great pictures Steve. Thanks for sharing them.
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked 'em, Ed!
DeleteAbsolutely Incredible Depth Of Field And Rather Whimsical Stories Within Each Capture
ReplyDeleteRecycling 101 ,
Cheers
It's great when the slides come with some information -- like a location and/or a year.
DeleteI believe my favorite image in this entire wonderful display is of the little flower girl (I suppose she was a flower girl) who has reached her wit's end. I think the woman standing behind her stole Dolly Parton's wig. Perfection!
ReplyDeleteThese are all so interesting. What a great eye you have.
I loved that little girl, too! In fact that might be my favorite picture of the bunch. Literally everyone is interesting -- and I love the fact that the bride is apparently off to the left and not even really in the shot.
DeleteIt's strange seeing "old" photos and then realizing that they are part of your lifetime. Well done. I can see you becoming a historian and preserver of old photos.
ReplyDeleteI was at the Hodge Podge Lodge the other day (it's at the eco centre, you leave stuff you don't want and can pick up for free stuff that others have left), and I came across a ziploc bag filled with envelopes that contained patterns from the Red Cross. Some of the envelopes had been sent in 1946 and the postage was 1cent. I took them home and I'm going through them. I thought of you:)
I do have an archivist's instincts, if not an archivist's abilities! You should do a blog post about those patterns!
DeleteThe wedding picture and the 4 ladies in their "box suit" outfits ... Jacquie Kennedy made those suits popular in the day! I especially like the light blue one, 2nd from the right!
ReplyDeleteOh, and the bouffant hairstyle was quite the rage back then!
Yes, they are very Jackie, aren't they? Those bouffant hairstyles seem like they would have been hard to maintain.
DeleteYour slides are such a time capsule, Steve. They really take me back to the days of my youth.
ReplyDeleteThat's my hope -- that they will strike a chord with people and help connect us all to our personal and cultural past.
DeleteYou have a real treasure trove! The teenagers on the bench amused me, capturing the awkwardness between boys and girls, who were mainly educated in separate establishments, and had little idea how to behave around each other.
ReplyDeleteYes, I noticed how all the boys are at one end! I also saw this at the school where I worked -- when it came to socializing, the boys and girls really tended to stick together in same-sex groups. Maybe this was true when I was in school as well and I just never noticed, but my own friend group was very mixed.
DeleteThat Christmas one is Christmas afternoon, the tea with all the cakes and a pot of tea. Very familiar scene to me, except they don't have the plate of ham and tongue for the people who preferred savory to sweet. Christmas Tea was when your aunts descended on the house! And that was when my dad toasted my mom for her work all year, hence the bottle, toasts maybe.
ReplyDeleteIn another picture of the lineup of women, feet posed just so, the dark blue suit lady was wearing my strap shoes!
I just saw a plate of sandwiches on the Christmas table, so maybe that's where the ham and tongue went!
DeleteThanks for explaining the Christmas tea! I was a bit confused because there were sweet and savory items on the table but no obvious main course.
DeleteThese are a real slice of life and a historical record of an era. I loved them all and can see why you chose them. (The donkey is in focus; the background blurred -- it was framed that way and well done!). Beryl knows how to rock a hat, doesn't she? I'm glad the new piece of gear is working out well.
ReplyDeleteYes, the focus tells the tale in the donkey photo, though I suppose it's possible the camera had auto-focus.
DeleteIt never occured to me tht Plymouth Rock would be a major tourist attraction all built up but of course it is. Gill's wedding pic with the skirt suits, pointy toed heels and gloves! And I love the donkey!
ReplyDeleteThe photo is Plymouth, in England, where the Mayflower departed -- not Plymouth Rock, in Massachusetts, where it landed. Yeah, I love that donkey picture too!
DeleteThese give me a glimpse into my own past when cars, clothing and hairstyle resembled what we see here. What a treasure! I love how we learn about various events and items through old photos.
ReplyDeleteMe too -- I think old photos are so valuable. (The good ones, anyway!)
DeleteWhat a great set of photos and such a nostalgic glimpse into the past. A past I have some very clear memories of. I thought that big rocky outcropping must be Plymouth rock but after looking it up, I see the "actual" rock is much smaller. It's probably down there somewhere. Beryl is a true fashionista. She looks great in that photo with the pink hat. Oh boy, the clothes and the hair, I remember dressing like that and trying to give my hair a bit of a poof. I LOVE that photo of the Christmas dinner/tea. The expression on the face of the guy with the woman on his lap is priceless. It makes me think he's up to something. That office photo intrigues me. I spent my entire career in the banking field and the photo does remind me a bit of 60's/70's banking. I do remember when we had to look up people's balances in a huge stack of green and white computer print-outs. That big book in the photo looks different from what I remember but then all banks might not have done their ledgers the same. The marble wall in the background speaks 'bank' to me.
ReplyDeleteThere is so much to see in all these photos!
Plymouth Rock is actually in Massachusetts -- the photo is Plymouth, in England. I agree about the office. If I were to guess, I'd say it's a bank.
DeleteSo many stories in these photos. We all need a Beryl in our lives.
ReplyDeleteAnd now we have one!
DeleteGreat photos Steve!
ReplyDeleteThe contrast between the 60-70's and today is dramatic in many ways. The memories run deep. The mounds of paper in the office seems striking.
Fashion was more formal. People took great pride in their dress and appearance. Special events and occasions all had a bit of decorum/formality or maybe that is typically more British than American.
The Christmas tea photo is lovely. I've been to a few (with British relatives) and this photo is perfection.
Thanks for sharing.
I think people would still dress up for a wedding, but admittedly not in hats and gloves. I did like the sense of style back then. As Marcia said above, it's very Jackie Kennedy.
DeleteWell these are a lot of fun! I love those fashions, but also the glimpse into the office (since I work in an office that is trying and failing abysmally to be paper free).
ReplyDeleteYeah, even now, so many of us deal with paper -- though nothing like in the "old days"!
DeleteThis needs to be a weekly (at least) feature here until you get through all the slides. As much as I love those fashions at the wedding, my favorite is the donkey. That's my kind of photo!
ReplyDeleteOh, a weekly feature! I like that idea, at least as long as I have enough interesting photos to post!
DeleteOh me oh my! I could have been at that very same Punch and Judy... I grew up in that area. My mother had that same LBD; she looked so glamorous in it with a statement brooch and ear rings. I can smell her perfume (Mitsoukou)...
ReplyDeleteFunny! I wonder if you're in the crowd! Too bad there's not enough background to recognize the location. People don't really wear brooches anymore, do they?
DeleteMy Mum does!
DeleteThe photos are very lovely, I especially like the first one and the car race one. the Christmas one too.
ReplyDeleteThe car race one literally made me go "Wow!"
Delete