View allAll Photos Tagged Operative
The Co-operative Food - Hazelwell Street, Stirchley.
Seen from the no 45 / 47 bus stop. It had been sleeting / raining.
Sign with the Union Jack to the left says that "The Co-operative Proud to serve Britain for over 165 years".
The present day Youth Hostel which originally used to be a Co Operative Shop on Church Street the main road through the village of Youlgreave in Derbyshire. Photo Taken: 06/10/13
I always thought this parade looked very Soviet. A 1950s postcard of the same view will be posted soon. To the right of the food shop a colour branded branch of the Co-operative Pharmacy. The ROyal RIbs take-away would also have been a co-operative shop, perhaps a butche,r once
20130903 Copyright image 2013©
Community energy petition handed in to Ed Davey, Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, outside the Department of Energy and Climate Change in central London. Handing in the petition were,
Jordan Williams, 15, Jack Palmer 15, Liam Cook from Fulston Manor School, Sittingbourne, Ryan Temple and Roselyn Xavier of the Co-op Youth Board, David Shreeve, Church of England, Will Dawson, Giles Bristow and Katie Shaw of the Forum for the Future and Colin Baines of the Co-operative Society.
For photographic enquiries please call Anthony Upton 07973 830 517 or email info@anthonyupton.com
This image is copyright Anthony Upton 2013©.
This image has been supplied by Anthony Upton and must be credited Anthony Upton. The author is asserting his full Moral rights in relation to the publication of this image. All rights reserved. Rights for onward transmission of any image or file is not granted or implied. Changing or deleting Copyright information is illegal as specified in the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988. If you are in any way unsure of your right to publish this image please contact Anthony Upton on +44(0)7973 830 517 or email:
Co-Operative Guild Ladies seated at tables awaiting the purvey at Broxburn Store Guild Tea, Co-Operative Halls, Broxburn. Copied from black and white photograph.
Date: 1940s/50s
Copyright : West Lothian Libraries.
Scan of b&w print.
West Lothian Local History Library. www.westlothian.gov.uk/tourism/LocalHistory/
All rights reserved.
If you would like to order a print of this photo, please contact localhistory@westlothian.gov.uk, quoting B7 1363.
The Amalgamated Union of Operative Bakers & Confectioners (AUOB & C) was founded in 1849 and is one of Britain’s oldest trade unions. Its first branch was established in Manchester, membership was small and remained fairly localised until the early 20th century. The AUOB & C held it first national conference in 1910, some sixty years after it was founded. In 2014, the BFAWU had around 20,500 members involved in diverse employment from production to retail.
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The AUOB & C underwent various name changed throughout its history;
1849 – Established as the Amalgamated Union of Operative Bakers & Confectioners.
1914 – Amalgamated Union of Operative Bakers & Confectioners & Allied Workers of Great Britain & Ireland.
1925 – Amalgamated Union of Operative Bakers & Confectioners & Allied Workers, dropping the words ‘of Great Britain & Ireland’.
1964 – Baker’s Union and later changed to their current name Bakers, Food & Allied Workers Union (BFAWU).
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If anyone knows for what purpose this badge was issued, I’d be grateful to hear from you. Could it have been issued for a conference?
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References:
unionbadges.wordpress.com/2008/09/30/amalgamated-union-of... (Outline history of the Amalgamated Union of Operative Bakers & Confectioners. Includes a photo of an enamel membership badge.)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakers,_Food_and_Allied_Workers%27_...
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Print: Flexography in 4 colours (purple, black, yellow & gold).
Finish: Clear cellulose laminate.
Material: Brass (?), paper & cellulose laminate.
Fixer: Buttonhole with round stud clasp.
Imprint: No maker’s name or mark.
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Photo reproduced with kind permission of the seller (rupertbear33).
Sold on eBay 16th November 2016.
Item number 311735590745.
Start price £0.99 and sold for £55 + p&p (7 bids from 5 bidders).
The Queen's Platinum Jubilee decorations at The Co-operative Funeral Care in Solihull.
Warwick Road near Lode Lane.
Union Jack bunting and flags in the window.
The Co-operative Food - Gospel Oak seen in the snow. Was a pub until 2009 called The Gospel Oak (or just The Oak).
It was converted into a Co-operative Food in 2010.
The former pub is on the corner of Gospel Farm Road and Gospel Lane.
The aftermath of the snow from early March 2018 as a result of the Beast from the East and Storm Emma.
Seen from Gospel Lane.
The Co-operative Food - Gospel Oak seen in the snow. Was a pub until 2009 called The Gospel Oak (or just The Oak).
It was converted into a Co-operative Food in 2010.
The former pub is on the corner of Gospel Farm Road and Gospel Lane.
The aftermath of the snow from early March 2018 as a result of the Beast from the East and Storm Emma.
Seen from the end of Lakey Lane.
the co-operative dancing girls, were exactly that, co operative when I pointed my camera at them!
Buy a Print here..... www.photoboxgallery.com/chrisbrookesphotography/collectio...
Co-operative member Martha Tuyisabe , washes her hands from a fresh water spring the co-operative built.
The Co-operative store at Lakenheath, Suffolk ...a throwaway shot taken when I was trying to rush a film through a recently acquired secondhand camera. It was January and the light was pretty awful. Goodbye to all that, thank goodness ...for the time being at least.
I retain a soft spot for the "Cwop" ...as my mother used to pronounce it... probably bound up with childhood memories of local shops, divi numbers and milk tokens. It survived four or five years of working for the outfit and persists in spite of that maddening "guid with fuid" voice in the TV ads. When I say I worked for the Co-op, it was actually at several removes. Nowadays, in an arrangement general throughout industry, road haulage, warehousing and distribution are handled by specialist firms, leaving the client to concentrate on its "core business". This is not necessarily a good thing from the point of view of workers in what are now known as "logistics". The client always has the whip hand, and the logistics firm lives in terror of losing its contract. Consequently it bends over backwards to keep its costs lower than those of its rivals, especially when the contract is coming up for renewal. Basically this translates into low pay and overwork.
Compared to the large supermarket chains, the Co-op is a pretty small-scale, tinpot operation, as it is bound to be. Even its largest stores are only medium-sized supermarkets. Most are small stores in suburban high streets or villages. Where Tesco or Asda receive their deliveries 26 pallets at a time directly from lorries at purpose-built loading bays, the Co-op's goods come in rickety, square-wheeled cages which have to be taken off by tail-lift, belaboured over the kerb, and pushed around to the store room at the back, or sometimes in through the front door of the shop. Some store managers were scrupulously honest, declaring accidental over-deliveries and suchlike; a few were crooks. The great majority in between didn't exactly break their necks to report errors in their favour ...I don't suppose I would in their position... and were not averse to squalid little rackets such as returning and "claiming for" unsold fruit and veg, obviously a fortnight old, maintaining that it had been received in unsaleable condition the day before. I tend to remember this sort of thing ...and there was much worse... when I hear supermarkets whining about the losses they suffer at the hands of shoplifters.
As you enter the Co-operative store hardware department in Beamish Museum the first thing that you see is this large imposing display cabinet containing the finest toilet sets that Edwardian England could provide. In the days before most houses had bathrooms (or even running water) these were essentials for the bedroom dresser and available in countless designs.
Copyright © 2009 Terry Pinnegar Photography. All Rights Reserved. THIS IMAGE IS NOT TO BE USED WITHOUT MY EXPRESS PERMISSION!
One of the few divisions of the Co-operative Service that appears to be booming.
Another new branch for the Funeral Service, in Limes Walk, Oakengates, Telford.
3 Oct 2014
Proper care prior to the surgery and after it determines the failure or the success of the procedure.
goarticles.com/article/Pre-And-Post-Operative-Care-After-...
Spine Surgery, 2nd Edition provides step-by-step, multimedia guidance to help you master the must-know techniques in this area and beside that for quick reference, this orthopaedics reference focuses on individual procedures which presented in a highly visual, easy-to-follow format.
If you would like to purchase this title, please click here.
The Co-Operative store on Morley Street in 1991 in the New Zealand area of Derby. The store then became a One Stop shop then a Jacksons Shop and now is a Sainsburys store. The Council House in the back left is on Hawke Street on the Morley Estate and the side of the shop with the shadow is Brigmore Walk.
Photography kindly supplied by an ex New Zealand resident.
Title / Titre :
Henry Anatuk, co-operative manager, takes an Inuk woman’s order, Port Burwell (Killiniq), Nunavut /
Henry Anatuk, gérant d’une coopérative, prend la commande d’une femme inuk à Killiniq (anciennement Port Burwell), au Nunavut
Creator(s) / Créateur(s) : Rosemary Gilliat Eaton
Date(s) : 1960
Reference No. / Numéro de référence : ITEM 3207300, 4953631
central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.redirect?app=fonandcol&id=3207...
central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.redirect?app=fonandcol&id=4953...
Location / Lieu : Killiniq [Port Burwell], Nunavut, Canada
Credit / Mention de source :
Rosemary Gilliat Eaton. National Film Board of Canada. Library and Archives Canada, e011177374 /
Rosemary Gilliat Eaton. Office national du film du Canada. Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, e011177374
See all the "Post-Operative Ward" media
The care of our patients has been really good, both by our team and by the local doctors and nurses. The post op ward is air conditioned, which is really important for these little patients. They lie out on beds, cots or even on the floor with their families along one wall. The rest of the room is filled with post op adults and people with a variety of other ailments. There is little monitoring equipment, but sometimes sophisticated treatments. One night we observed a sick man on the other side of the ward having a CVP (central venous pressure) taken by the old open manometer tube method. He had a dopamine drip running! Another time we observed a young man being treated for a GI bleed with gastric lavage. Tragically he ended up dying before the night was out. This video was originally shared on blip.tv by Interplast with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license.
The National Co-Operative Men's Guild (NCMG) was established in 1911 as an auxiliary organisation within the Co-Operative Wholesale Society.
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ourhistory-hayes.blogspot.com/search/label/Women%27s%20Co... (the NCMG is mentioned in this article).
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Enamels: 2 (white & blue).
Finish: Gilt.
Material: Brass.
Fixer: Buttonhole (horseshoe shaped clasp).
Size: 1” x 1” (about 25mm x 25mm)
Process: Die stamped.
Makers: Thomas Fattorini Ltd, Regent St, Birmingham (1933-1961).
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Thank you for reading.
Stuart.
Closed February 2007 upon the withdrawal of The Co-operatrive Group from Non-Food; now being converted to a Premier Travel Inn
As part of a minor reorganisation, the Co-op vehicles have been moved slightly to give a more co-ordinated display. Behind the two horse-drawn vehicles, the Regal, taxi and Fordson 7V have regained their viewing space. Aston Manor Transport Museum, Aldridge.
Closed February 2007 upon the withdrawal of The Co-operatrive Group from Non-Food; now being converted to a Premier Travel Inn
Employees of The Co-operative busy at their desks in New Century House during the early 1960’s.
The Co-operative Group has received planning permission from Manchester City Council to build its new head office in Manchester.
The new building, which will be constructed on land on Miller Street, opposite the Co-operative Insurance tower, will serve as the head office for The Co-operative Group, the UK’s largest mutual retailer.
Watch a virtual tour of The Co-operative Group’s new head office www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcHGVv1bJTU
Antony Costa and Co-Operative staff pictured outside his local Co-operative Food store in North London
somerfield closure, Lower Clapton road, Hackney E5 Not rebranded as The Co-operative, closed June 28 2012. here it is in former times