Street name signs were indeed cast iron and very heavy.
Google Earth image.
I suspect the Highfield Road sign you have CambridgeCov was a more modern one similar to that which in situ today.
Btw, I was there sitting on the pitch behind the goal line at the covered end.
I was there, in the Main Stand. I think that was the match where they had a motorcycle display team charging back and forth in front of the stand. Brilliant atmosphere and great resultEvening all. Quick check online confirms 29th April will mark 58 years since the famous Wolves match! My dear Dad was there, many others remember the game? We could do with that kind of passion in the next couple of games.
I used to cycle to matches in the early 70s and put my bike in a property in Swan Lane opposite the stand & a bit below where the plumbers merchants are now. The cost was less than the bus fares from Whitley and back.I posed the question on The Historic Coventry Forum regarding the original HR road sign and a forumite kindly responded as follows ......
I could be wrong but one of the original Highfield Road signs may have gone before 1937. Stepping through the maps, the east side of the street used to have about 4 more properties on it. They were demolished to extend Thackall Street. Instead of a road, there was a footpath leading to allotments and on to Swan Lane. It seems reasonable that the Highfield Road sign was on the first of the demolished terraced houses as it would have faced travellers as they approached the corner. The west corner doesn't have its full set of decorative brickwork on the ground floor and looks like it might have been a shop at some point. The sign, if there was one, could have been removed when it was turned into a shop or when it was converted back. There don't seem to be signs at the other end either. They may have vanished due to renovations to the buildings (eg rendering) or to a light fingered fan. The sign at ground level on the corner in Google Street View vanished between 2020 and 2022.
Another forum member chipped in with the following.......
The corner house in question was a general grocery shop which was run in the 60's -70's by Jack Patience. If my memory is correct he was at that time the chairman of the Coventry City Supporters Club which was housed under the stand opposite. The entrance to the shop had a corner door entrance, common to shops of 1920's build and large windows to both sides. There was a bomb site on the opposite side of Highfield Road and on match days there was a man who sold tickets to look after bicycles which he charged around 3d per cycle. A couple of my mates lived in Highfield Road and I can remember being chased of the allotments several times as there were a couple of apple trees on them which backed onto Ranby Road and were accessed at the other end of the street........happy days
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