03 High Street: Difference between revisions

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** Lavie Nails & Lashes
** Lavie Nails & Lashes


[[File:High_Street_TRAIL_1920s.jpg|600px|thumb|left|We aren't sure yet but we are 99% convinced that this photo was taken in front of The American Soda Fountain for the following reasons:  <br>1.  The angle makes it tricky but the windows and pediment appear to match.  <br>2.  Alexander Trail was the proprietor of the Soda Fountain. <br>3.  Alexander Traill was listed in directories as a Confectioner. <br>4. This photo is from the 1920s and we know that Alex's son Herbert William ran his businesses from 1925 but not the earliest location before he moved to [[44 High Street]] .  It  makes sense that he would have started in partnership with his father before branching out on his own. ]]
[[File:High_Street_TRAIL_1920s.jpg|600px|thumb|left|We aren't sure yet but we are 99% convinced that this photo was taken in front of The American Soda Fountain for the following reasons:  <br>1.  The angle makes it tricky but the windows and pediment appear to match.  <br>2.  Alexander Trail was the proprietor of the Soda Fountain. <br>3.  Alexander Traill was listed in directories as a Confectioner. <br>4. This photo is from the 1920s and we know that Alex's son Herbert William ran his businesses from 1925 but not the earliest location before he moved to [[44 High Street]] .  It  makes sense that he would have started in partnership with his father before branching out on his own. (Photo courtesy of Ken Traill) ]]
[[File:High_Street_03_(1932).jpg|600px|thumb|left|Part of a streetscape taken in 1932 - shows the American Soda Fountain (formerly the Union Hotel) run by A Traill & Sons.  The building occupied the site from 3 to 9a High Street.]]
[[File:High_Street_03_(1932).jpg|600px|thumb|left|Part of a streetscape taken in 1932 - shows the American Soda Fountain (formerly the Union Hotel) run by A Traill & Sons.  The building occupied the site from 3 to 9a High Street.]]
[[File:High_Street_03_1940s.jpg|600px|thumb|left|Part of a similar streetscape taken in the 1940s - now showing shops.]]
[[File:High_Street_03_1940s.jpg|600px|thumb|left|Part of a similar streetscape taken in the 1940s - now showing shops.]]

Revision as of 23:25, 7 January 2026

1 High Street - ◦ - 5 High Street

  • 3 - 9a High Street
    • General Store
    • Union Hotel (1844 to 1885)
    • American Soda Fountain (- 1925 to 1932 +)
  • 3 High Street
    • Mustangs Hair Salon (1993)
    • New Norfolk Fruit & Vegie Supplies (1995)
    • Linda's Barber Shop (2007 & 2009)
    • Tasmanian Timber Craft Gallery (2014)
    • Yeah Yeah (2016)
    • Lavie Nails & Lashes
We aren't sure yet but we are 99% convinced that this photo was taken in front of The American Soda Fountain for the following reasons:
1. The angle makes it tricky but the windows and pediment appear to match.
2. Alexander Trail was the proprietor of the Soda Fountain.
3. Alexander Traill was listed in directories as a Confectioner.
4. This photo is from the 1920s and we know that Alex's son Herbert William ran his businesses from 1925 but not the earliest location before he moved to 44 High Street . It makes sense that he would have started in partnership with his father before branching out on his own. (Photo courtesy of Ken Traill)
Part of a streetscape taken in 1932 - shows the American Soda Fountain (formerly the Union Hotel) run by A Traill & Sons. The building occupied the site from 3 to 9a High Street.
Part of a similar streetscape taken in the 1940s - now showing shops.
Detail from an Ash Bester postcard from around 1956.
A still from the short film "Valley of the Derwent" produced in 1958. State aerial photos show that by 1963 the building had been demolished and replaced with the current single storey shops.
An ad for New Norfolk Fruit & Vegie Supplies from the Derwent Valley Gazette in 1995
Linda's Barber Shop in 2009 (Photo courtesy of Google Maps)
Lavie Nails & Lashes in 2023 (Photo courtesy of Google Maps)