http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A0DEEDC1230F931A25752C0A960948260&sec=travel&pagewanted=print
Marc,
A great article. I wonder how much the street has changed?
A wonderful read - Thank you Marc.
1986, the glorious days of the $1 pound.
No shoe shops then except Russell and Bromley. It's more of a shoe street than anything else now.
Trimmer
Jermyn Street was always shirts & ties in the same way that the Row was for suits.
The only other connection that the place had was during the war when my grandfather was warned against 'The Second-Hand Ladies of Jermyn Street'. What a lovely phrase!
They would stroll up and down and say things like "Rub your tum, Gov'ner?"
Bless them.
M.
Is Clubland still the same as it was?
Fosters still sells a good shoe (Made by Crockett & Jones?). I have a pr of suede monks I should wear one of these days. And, Harvie & Hudson, still family-owned, make a decent shirt, although their collar is too stiff for me.
I have been sadly reminded that I am also banned from the RAC Club down on the Mall...
I used to go there as a guest & use the Turkish Bath & Swimming Pool...
I'm banned merely for going to the bar first and then walking around downstairs wearing a only towel with a plate of sandwiches in one hand and a bottle of wine in the other.
And you think that Andy runs a tight ship!
Miles.
(Sounds like balls, I know, but that one was also true.)
... Where will I ever find a home?
Last edited by Will (2006-11-01 17:16:54)
Jermyn St even has its own Website...
http://www.jermynstreet.net/
Interesting history of Jermyn Street...
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=40572
Trickers shoes, a quality concern still under family ownership, I believe, has a location on JS...
http://www.trickers.com/index_MAIN.html
I remember my first visit to Jermyn Street in the mid 1980's. I had the good fortune to meet the McKenna brothers who ran Lewin. To be surrounded by all those club regimentals was a pleasure, indeed. The current store lacks the same authentic clubbiness but I still find their shirts to be of good value.
I also recall a pleasant dalliance in the Cavendish Hotel bar whose manager then showed me great courtesy and hospitality (I was a high school punk, after all!).
And to have actually walked into Simpson's in those days: there will never be a store of that ambiance anywhere, evermore...