Glasgow Times

TIMES PAST Radio gem McFlannels brings back memories

ALL OUR YESTERDAYS

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WHO remembers The McFlannels? First broadcast on March 18, 1939, it was a radio serial about Glasgow families – Scotland’s very first soap.

There were the posh McSilks, middle- class McCorduroy­s and working- class McFlannels. Lots of Scots stars appeared, including Molly Weir ( above- right), who played “Poison” Ivy McTweed, and Rikki Fulton.

Mary Fraser remembers it well, as part of a happy Glasgow childhood.

“I was born in Rottenrow in 1938 and lived at 252 Cathedral Street – I remember Paddy’s the cobblers, the Grafton chippy, Brechin’s Butchers and the Montrose Street Dairy, run by two sisters who measured out the milk with a jug from two large cans,” she says.

“We moved to 10 Canning Place, off Cathedral Street. I remember

Bobby’s goods workshop, where you took the accumulato­r to be ‘ serviced up’ otherwise you wouldn’t hear The McFlannels on a Saturday night...”

( For younger readers, an accumulato­r was used in wireless sets, like a rechargeab­le battery. It was normally given to the local garage or hardware merchant for recharging, who would give you your spare unit while this was being done.)

Mary, who now lives in Doncaster, adds: “Canning Place was a most unusual mix of properties – main door houses, tenements, garden flats and sublets. I could go on... I moved south in 2002 to a lovely village, but I will always be a Glasgow city girl.”

Do you remember the McFlannels? Do Mary’s reminiscen­ces spark any happy memories for you?

Get in touch by emailing ann. fotheringh­am@ glasgowtim­es. co. uk

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