No. 19: Café Crème

No. 19 on the right is part of the same building as No. 20 on the left, and they are jointly Grade II listed (1485/180). They date from about 1700, but have been remodelled.
At the time of the 1851 census, the building was occupied by John Prentice, a master ironmonger, with his wife and two grown-up daughters.
In 1861 John Piper, a tailor and hosier, was in this building with his wife and three children.
In 1881 it was occupied by the tobacconist here, George E. Dorrell, with his wife and baby daughter and a 13-year-old servant.
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Occupants of 19 Broad Street listed in directories |
|
1846 |
George King, Bootmaker |
1852 |
Ann Coker, Milliner & dressmaker |
1861 |
John Horn |
1867–1876 |
William H. Walker, Tailor & Robe maker |
1880 |
G.E. Dorrill, Tobacconist |
1882–1887 |
H.R. Saunders, Tobacconist & cigar merchant |
1889–1894 |
Miss Mary Pell, Milliner |
1894–1895 |
F. Crow & Son, Wool merchant |
1895–1898 |
Miss S.E. Berrill, Milliner |
1899 |
G.I.L. Long, Confectioner |
1899–1902 |
Hamlet & Dulake, Auctioneers |
1903–1909 |
William Hunt, Typewriter dealer & City Typewriting Office |
1910–1932 |
Frank Thomas Long, Cutler (and Ladies & gents' hairdresser in 1932 only) |
1934–1939 |
Feilding & Moore, Furniture dealers |
1941–1975 |
G.E. Taylor, Tailor & robe maker |
1980–2004 |
Stamp of Oxford Ltd, Tailors |
2005–present |
Café Crème |