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 The shops at Cherry Tree hide a long story. They look like a row of bog-standard boring northern terraced shops, don't they? Go on, you don't have to be polite. The front have been made over, again and again. But as the late, great Professor Mick Aston would say...look round the back at at the top. You start to see the full story.  Start at the top. See those huge broad chimney stacks?       Count the chimney pots. OK, they have been knocked about and altered. There would have been originally 6 chimney pots on each side of that stack - that's apparently six chimney pots for each house. That means six hearths in each house - toasty warm eh? But hold on. When you look back at how these shops and homes were built, in the middle part of the 1800s, you quickly realise they were built as 'back-to back houses'. So basiclly, no back door, and a dividing wall down the apex of that long shared roof separated the 'front' properties from the 'back' properties. ...

The Chippy at Cherry Tree

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  I've lived in this area since 1981, and this has always been a chippy.   Like the clock in Trumpton, this shop has stood there doing what it does, steadily, sensibly, not telling the time but feeding the folk. When David Yip was the owner his portion control, or lack of it, was legendary. He unwittingly invented the bucket o' chips. One protion regularly fed all four of us, me, him and the kids. The Chippy sits in a row of buildings that have their own unspoken story. They were already there when the 1846 map was drawn up, but back then they were not just back-to back houses, but what are now the cellars were separate homes. The good old days?

What's the best photo you took for the High Street Project, and what's the story behind it?

They say a picture paints a thousand words. Many of you have already started to tell us the stories behind the buildings in the photos you have taken.  So we'd like to invite all those participating in the High Street Project to post their favourite photo, plus a maximum 200 word description of why they chose it and what they want to tell everyone about it. You can go on to say and post more about a building, but we want to use your photo and 'caption story' for a national poll so you and your friends can choose the best ones.