Deal
Deal maps (2 available)
Deal books (11 available)
- 12 photos on Deal appear in 4 Frith books - View photos of Deal
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Deal and Kent
Deal memories
Spitfire
About 1943 - disabled Spitfire landed 30 yards from beach opposite Golden Hind cafe and just beyond hotel on right. 3 or 4 chaps stripped off, swam out and pulled pilot from aircraft. I hope pilot survived but don't know if he did. Does anyone know?
Contributed by jim bell
Deal High Street - the other end!
I spent my youth with my family "above the shop" in Deal High Street. My father, Morris Orchard, first worked in, then inherited, the family shoe shop, which had been in business since my great grandfather's time. In those days it was F. H. Orchard and Son, Bespoke Bootmaker - we still had stationery lying around with his name on it, and out the back we had the workshop, still with old tools, bits of leather and so on. It passed to my grandfather, M. H. Orchard, whom I remember as a very gruff, frightening old man, who had been injured in the First World War and only got around with difficulty. My father Morris lived his whole life over the ...read more here
Contributed by Cherry Robinson
I was born in the shop on left hand side, White Fuller (Kent)
The shop on left hand side is White Fuller (Kent) Ltd, 68 High Street, Deal. My father, Cecil Prime, was the owner. Our mother, Phyllis, my brother John Prime and myself lived there. John and I were both born there he in 1948 and myself in 1947. We spent all our formative years here. I have been looking for photos of this building to include in a memory book for my brother's birthday. If there are any other photos around from 1947-1960 I would be interested. John joined the Royal Navy and retired as a Commander and now lives in Portsmouth. I worked at Pfizer, married David Wellard, moved to Hong Kong in 1972 and then to New York State in ...read more here
Contributed by Francesca Wellard
Regent Cinema
My family were Skinners of Deal. My mum Sheila used to work at the Regent cinema on the sea-front. I used to love being able to go & see films over & over when she as working there, (I remember seeing "The Music Man" 7 times!). Does anyone remember the little pony & trap that used to give rides to the children? It used to leave from round the entrance to the pier & go along the sea-front and back - a treat indeed for us kids. There also used to be a photographer who used to stand by the pier & take day-tripper's photos. Does anyone remember the old man (or so he seemed to me as a child), who ...read more here
Contributed by Margaret Geoge
Piddock and Smiths
My gt. grandfathers married sisters named Brothers. The three familes have been in and around Deal for centuries Gt. grandfather Maxwell was a Royal Marine, as was grandfather Piddock. My father 'Phys' Pidddock was welterweight boxing champ RM in 1925. Smiths were in the fish trade. Ted Smith had the first Fish and Shop in Deal [North side of Alfred Square] well before WW1. Grandfather Piddock had sweet shop in London Road opp. the Parochial School. I worked at Lamberts Laundries and left Deal 1964 to enter legal profession. I recall the summer days swimming, the boatmen, the outbreak of war, evacuation to South Wales, our return to the damaged town we loved, the decline of the laundry trade [we once ...read more here
Contributed by Herbert Piddock
Shelter
How could I forget these shelters (there were two of them)? We moved to North Deal in 1954 when I was 10. The shelter at the top of Farrier Street was nearest to me - a place to stand in a storm, I practised hitting hockey balls against the concrete steps, my beloved Granny used to sit on one side and watch the sea, our tenant, in Indian Army officer (retired and without much money) used to sit in the shelter too, very lonely I think, remembering better times. They were the refuge of lovers at night, of fishermen at dawn, of mothers with prams and toddlers on hot summer days. Last time I was in Deal (2007) 'my' shelter ...read more here
Contributed by William Horwood
Extracts From Deal & Kent books
The castle was built in 1539, and came under the control of the Lord Warden of the Cinque
Ports. In 1648 the castle was captured by Colonel Nathaniel Rich for Parliament. The white
building to the rear of the castle has been demolished.
An extract from from"Around the Kent Coast".
Two kiosks at the entrance to the pier used to take bookings for cruises and shows. On the right of
the pier are two of the town’s hotels, The Antwerp and The Clarendon. The pier has always been
popular with fishermen, and catches of bass, bull huss, cod, conger, dab, dogfish, flounder, mullet,
plaice, pouting and sole are common.
An extract from from"Around the Kent Coast".
The tall building with a
flag flying at the top (right)
was the Beach House
Temperance Hotel. Further
along is the Timeball Tower
(centre), built to give
Greenwich Mean Time to
passing ships by dropping a
large ball down a shaft at the
top of the tower at exactly
1pm every day. It operated
from 1855 until 1927.
An extract from from"Around the Kent Coast".
It has not been long since a horse or two trotted along this Edwardian street, as the evidence in the centre of the road reveals. A year later many residents would be discussing the horrors of a whirlwind, which ripped through the town wrecking roofs and farms. In 1995 members of the Royal Marine Band died here when the IRA bombed them during a parade.
An extract from from"Kent Revisited Photographic Memories".
Two kiosks at the entrance to the pier used to take bookings for cruises and shows. On the right of
the pier are two of the town’s hotels, The Antwerp and The Clarendon. The pier has always been
popular with fishermen, and catches of bass, bull huss, cod, conger, dab, dogfish, flounder, mullet,
plaice, pouting and sole are common.
An extract from from"Around the Kent Coast".





