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Brighton Municipal Market

Built in 1937 following slum clearance

This photographic print was made by the Borough Surveyor's department. It shows Brighton Municipal Market in Circus Street. The company names T. Roll, W. Grant Currie Ltd and Goodhew are visible.

This market was built in 1937 following a clearance of the slum housing in this area. Although it was hit by a bomb in 1943, the market survived. A fish market was added to the building in 1960.

Photo:Brighton Municipal Market

Brighton Municipal Market

Reproduced courtesy of Royal Pavilion, Libraries & Museums, Brighton & Hove

Photo:Brighton Municipal Market after bomb damage caused on March 29 1943

Brighton Municipal Market after bomb damage caused on March 29 1943

Reproduced courtesy of Royal Pavilion, Libraries & Museums, Brighton & Hove

Audio transcripts

This page was added on 16/11/2006.

Comments:

I worked for W. Grant Currie Ltd. in the mid 60s as a market gardener.  There were quite a few of us girls that came from Brighton and travelled to his farm in Peacehaven each day by cattle truck. We were on piece work and had a quota to do each day, when we had done our quota we could go home, as hitchhiking was quite safe in those days we used to hitch a lift back to Brighton each afternoon in groups of two's & three's to Lyon's Tea Rooms at the bottom of St James Street for a lovely tea or coffee before going home.
In the winter we had to work on other farms around Sussex sprout picking i.e. Thakeham, Glynde, Telscombe, Southease, Barcombe Mills etc. we had to come back to the Municipal Market in Brighton by cattle truck from those farms with all of the sprouts that we had picked, if we saw any dishy looking men on our way back to Brighton we would throw a few sprouts at them, unfortunately on at least one occasion we were spotted by the local police and made to get out of the truck and pick up all of the sprouts we had thrown, very embarrassing.

By Marion Goodwin (22/04/2007)

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