Queen Street - Winn's Corner Shop
F.A. Winn General Store Proprietor A.M. Rayner
Copyright Ted Rayson
Peter Topps recalling Wynn's Corner Shop
Photograph by David Middleton
True Friends - Miss Rayner and Miss Wells
From the collection of Mr. Peter Topps
Memories - Winn's Corner Shop
By David Middleton
Miss Wells and Miss Rayner former proprietors of 'F.A.Winn - Corner Shop'.
Edith Wells who eventually went to work for Miss Rayner on the corner, when Jackson Miller sort of retired or disappeared Edith Wells went to work for Miss Rayner up here at the corner shop. .... Now this shop was F.A Winn - grocer and draper (details of windows). It was run - Miss Rayner and Edith Wells - Miss Wells. Now Miss Rayner was a very genteel nicely spoken real old lady, real real lady. Now Edith, lovely lass but absolutely chalk and cheese. Edith had quite a few adjectives in her vocabulary but they got on like a house on fire. They really did. And again their grave is not far from where our graves are in the Church yard and I can show you at a later date, and there is a little stone up there, um 'Edith Rayner and Edith Wells (whatever it is ) and the inscription is 'True Friends' - that's what it says on the grave, on the little stone. But this shop it sold provisions, knitting wools, children's clothes, everything. That was 'F.A.Winn'.
Peter Topps From BLHS Archive Interview, December 2006
Thanks to Brenda Turier and Maureen Hill for the memories they have added (See below). Does anyone else have any memories of Miss Rayner and Miss Wells and the shop they ran which they can add to these reminiscences?