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After You've Gone: East End Shopfronts, 1988

Alan Dein's photographs of East End shop fronts were taken in 1988 when many Tower Hamlets streets were on the verge of dereliction. Alan, an oral historian and broadcaster, lived in Stepney at the time. He decided to capture the diminishing, decaying local shops on film, many of them relics of the area’s Jewish community. These oral history clips of former shop owners and customers shed light on life in the borough from the 1950s to the 1980s.


Oral histories
Recorded in spring 2012

Sheila Butt grew up in Great Eastern Buildings, near to the Truman Brewery, in the early 1950s. She recalls host of East End characters and places including Leon’s shop, Petticoat Lane, and the famous Prince Monolulu.

Sheila Butt

Sheila Butt grew up in Great Eastern Buildings, near to the Truman Brewery, in the early 1950s. She recalls host of East End characters and places including Leon’s shop, Petticoat Lane, and the famous Prince Monolulu.

Sheila Butt (1)

Life in Great Eastern Buildings

Sheila Butt (2)

Leaving the East End

Sheila Butt (3)

Winkles and shrimps for Sunday tea

Sheila Butt (4)

What your parents sacrificed for you

Sheila Butt (5)

Penny policy and under the table

Sheila Butt (6)

’You’ve brought me home’

Barry Gelkoff

Barry Gelkoff and his parents ran Gelkoff’s confectionery shop on Whitechapel High Street from 1956 until soon after Alan’s picture was taken in 1988. Here he shares his memories of the local area, and an East End institution that once even shipped chocolates to the South Pole.

Barry Gelkoff (1)

Previous owners and building up the shop

Barry Gelkoff (2)

Walter and Sylvia Pomper

Barry Gelkoff (3)

Memorable customers

Barry Gelkoff (4)

Describing the neighbourhood 

Barry Gelkoff (5)

Describing the neighbourhood 2

Barry Gelkoff (6)

A robbery

Barry Gelkoff (7)

Gelkoff Snr

Barry Gelkoff (8)

Inside the shop

Fay Cattini

Fay Cattini lived in Wheler House, close to Leon’s shop where she remembers buying sweets as a child. Fay still lives in Spitalfields, and speaks about her childhood, leaving, and returning to the East End.

Fay Cattini (1)

Leon’s

Fay Cattini (2)

Shopping

Fay Cattini (3)

’I didn’t know there had been a war’ 

Fay Cattini (4)

‘It’s cheaper to pull something down and rebuild’