It's time to catch up with readers' comments and further information about some of my recent archive photographs. My thanks and good wishes for 2017 go to all who contacted me.
1. Sir Adrian Boult at Hingham church, 1962 (Down Memory Lane, October 2). The orchestra he is conducting is the London Philharmonic, not the Royal Philharmonic as stated.
2. In my feature on Wells and Hunstanton (From our Archives, October 8), Joseph and Ruby Helm of Ingoldisthorpe, were spotted by their daughter out shopping in Hunstanton in 1986.
3. The Will sailing barge (FOA, Oct 15). Dick Melton writes that she was originally named the Will Everard and was built in 1925 by Fellows of Yarmouth for T Everard & Sons of Greenhithe, Kent. She was a mule-rigged barge with brown sails 100 feet long and had a crew of three. The barge used to load grain at King's Lynn. In 1966 she was sold for £750 to a new owner who changed her name to the Will and in 2004 she was sold again to a company called 'Top Sail Events' for private charter work.
4. Bruce Hogg recognised himself in my picture of the Trimingham minefield (DML, October 28). He was a sergeant in the Royal Engineers and is seen on the right. He went on to become Norfolk's Chief Fire Officer, retiring in 1989. The photo was staged close to the bomb disposal team's reception area as our photographer wasn't permitted to go into the minefield. A total of 26 Royal Engineers died clearing mines from Norfolk's beaches, the last two in May, 1953.
5. My picture of the hole on Orford Place, Norwich in 1953 (DML, October 26) prompted Richard Sendall to email me his detailed recollections of the roads and bus routes in that busy part of Norwich. He also recounted how an older colleague who had been frequenting the NAAFI club (now Marks & Spencer's) subsequently climbed down into the hole and attempted to swim across the water tank without being caught.
6. My picture of a gentleman strolling through Hoxne (DML, November 2) prompted two readers to get in touch. He has been identified as either William Brown (by his daughter Charlotte who still lives in the village) or as Wilfred Baldwin by his grandson David. On the left foreground is the garden of the Swan public house where the gentleman may have been heading.
7. New Holkham's Granary Chapel (DML, November 4). Reader David Yarham emailed to say that both his father and grandfather had been superintendants of the Sunday school. The building is still used as a chapel with services once a month, an annual carol service and Christmas Eve carol singing round local farms.
8. Hairdresser Enzo Casale (FOA, November 5). Ottavio Casale confirmed that his father is still working as a barber in St Vedast Street, Norwich, and Ottavio and his sister are hairdressing at the family salon on Aylsham Road.
9. Weights and measures (FOA, November 26). Reader John Watson recognised his younger self in the foreground of my photo taken in 1953 at J&J Colman. John went on to a career with the Electricity Board.
10. Mr RA Abbott, deputy chief inspector, weights and measures, (FOA, November 26). John Thirtle wrote to point out that in 1955 the Weights and Measures building was actually an adjunct to the pre-war County Offices on Thorpe Road, opposite the main county offices and sharing space for a time with the county library. Before that the staff were based in an antiquated building in Tombland and in the 1960s they moved to the newly-built County Hall.
If you recognise anyone in the pictures or would like to tell us more about them you can email rosemary.dixton@archant.co.uk
Make sure you join our Facebook group: Norwich Remembers, for a nostalgic look at Norwich over the decades.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules here