Silver and Gold Magazine Spring 2019 | Page 10

SENIORS MOMENTS – By Don Crossley O ur 62nd wedding anniversary is fast approaching, and as we prepared dinner in our kitchen recently, we recalled these years, which really have passed in a flash. Joan remembered where we had bought many of the items we still use to this day. This of course, ties in with our last column, about shopping in downtown Hamilton, where Joan and I first met, as employees of the old Imperial Bank of Canada on James St. South. Because we worked in the downtown Hamilton area, we were close to the shops where we found many of our household items. It was very convenient, during our lunch hours, to visit any of the uptown department stores. SHARE YOUR MEMORIES! If you have memories you would like to share with the public through this column, please contact Don by email: [email protected] or you may send your photos and letters through Silver & Gold Magazine. Please see page 5 for mailing address. For my 20th Birthday, Joan surprised me with a beautiful state-of-the-art wrist watch, which would automatically self- wind, from Birks located at the corner of King and James street. I am pleased to report that I still wear this watch for special occasions, and it keeps time perfectly. Eaton’s also had a very large store on James St. North. We still recall their beautifully decorated store windows each Christmas. We continued to shop there for many years after we were married until the one here at the Burlington Mall opened. For example, pots and pans from Robinsons, stainless steel cutlery from the Right House, dinnerware, both casual and more formal items, from Birks, located only two doors away from the bank. Joan’s engagement ring was from an uptown jewellery shop, the fabric for Joan’s trousseau from Finch’s who still used the pneumatic tubes, to take cash away and return your change. Robinson’s 1959 Hamilton Public Library Archives. Eaton’s Centre Christmas Window Display, 1958 During the early years of our marriage, I was employed as a travelling Internal Auditor, which required me to be on the road almost five days a week. This meant that Joan had to run the home herself, and because she did not drive, she relied heavily on being able to phone in orders to the stores just mentioned and have things delivered right to our door. This was especially true around Christmas when she would purchase gifts by phone, having seen the item in one of the ads in the Hamilton Spectator. To say that my gifts from her on Christmas morning were a complete surprise, is an understatement.• 10 Lots more online! www.silvergoldmagazine.ca