Thursday 8 September 2022

Secrets of the supermarket

During the pandemic, and especially during lockdown, I went along - via Zoom, of course! - to lots of different talks, and courses, which included a number of writing events. What follows is what I wrote during one of those writing events, in response to the writing prompt – ‘That place has a curious past and may hold many secrets’! 

And, we had to do this under a 30-minute limit!!! 

Hope the results are of interest! 

I walk a lot, and I particularly love urban walking. Over the years I’ve found myself not only looking up, but also looking down, and, in fact, looking all around as I walk! History is all around us, and it is because of that history that we are where we are today. Indeed, that is why I am here today, standing outside the International Supermarket, thirsty after my long walk!


 

The sun reflects off the white rendered building. The huge ground floor windows look somewhat out of place, disproportionate in size, ugly even, with wire grill shutters to deter non-shoppers from entering. Looking up, I see some curious brickwork that looks like window ledges, but there are no upstairs windows! In the middle of the triangular-shaped upper storey, alongside what looks like a 20th-century burglar alarm, is what appears to be a badge  - is it a crest of some sort, or just an ornament, a decoration?


 

The door to the shop is awkwardly placed in the middle of the building’s frontage, and I stagger up the two green-painted steps, to enter the shop – full of delicious delicacies and foodstuffs from a range of countries, like Poland and Greece, as you’d expect really, given the shop’s name.

It feels exciting to go into the shop, and yet, it also feels perhaps a little run down, and very much more like a corner shop than a clinical national chain food hall. Something – a tingling down my spine perhaps – tells me that there is far more to this building than meets the eye, so, refreshments purchased, I rush home to do a bit of desk research – we are still in the grips of the pandemic, after all, and so many buildings are still closed, and services non-operational, that desk work is currently the only option.

Several weeks pass as I amass more and more information about the building that houses the International Supermarket, until finally, I feel ready to tell its story, albeit somewhat briefly!

The building is far older than I had realised, and was originally opened in 1823, and according to Helen and Richard (1986) (1) it was constructed to be Loughborough’s first purpose-built theatre. If you know the Georgian Theatre in Richmond, Yorkshire, which is still operating as a theatre – pandemic permitting – then you have an idea of what Loughborough’s theatre was originally like. An expert in our local Leicestershire theatres has created a plan of the building as it probably was at its opening, showing the raked stage and the high ceilings, neither of which are visible today from the shop floor (2).

Mr Bennett, the producer for whom the theatre was created, had theatrical interests in other Midlands towns, like Sheffield, so he was rather experienced. He opened the theatre with a production of ‘Speed the Plough’, a comedy by Thomas Morton, that had first been performed in Covent Garden in 1798, and with ‘Warlock of the Glen’, first performed at the Theatre Royal, Convent Garden in 1820 (3). Later, Master B. Grossmith, performed his one-man show at the theatre, although there is speculation about how he could have remained seven years of age for so many years!

The theatre was initially successful, but gradually declined in popularity, so much so, that around 1856 it was used by the local lodge of Oddfellows, as their regular meeting place. It is the badge of the Manchester Unity of Oddfellows that adorns the front of today’s International Supermarket.

Once the Oddfellows left the building, it became a dance hall, showed early films before there was a dedicated cinema in town, and then became the office of a local auction mart – Adkinson and Freckletons, the latter of which still have offices on Loughborough’s High Street.

Although there was a period of intermittent performance at the theatre, once the auction mart had left, the building was put to use as a bicycle repair shop, a carpet shop, an outdoor clothing shop, and has now been an international supermarket for over 10 years. Did I say earlier that they sell lovely baklavas?

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Notes

(1) Leacroft, Helen, and Leacroft, Richard (1986). 'The theatre in Leicestershire: a history of entertainment in the county from the 15th century to the 1960s'. Leicester: Leicestershire Libraries & Information Service

(2) ibid.

(3) Both according to entries in Wikipedia.

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posted by lynneaboutloughborough

With apologies for typos which are all mine!

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Thank you for reading this blog. You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follows:

Dyer, Lynne (2022). Secrets of the supermarket. Available from: https://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2022/09/secrets-of-supermarket.html     [Accessed 8 September 2022]

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