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Lens of Sutton - a recollection
Our Carshalton Running
Day in 2007 provided the opportunity for a tribute to that
one-time mecca of the transport enthusiast, Lens of Sutton.
If you arrive in Sutton from the east,
glance left at B&Q just before your bus swings into the one-way
system and you will be looking at the site of this late-lamented
‘transport literature specialist’, as the sign above the window
said. Despite possessing two street numbers (50/52 Carshalton
Road), Lens wasn’t quite as big as B&Q - there was scarcely
room for two people to squeeze past between the counter and the
packed shelves. There was a lower level, accessible only by a
hatch, but that was strictly the preserve of the proprietor, John L
Smith. He would emerge with a fresh cup of tea, preceded by
his ever-present beret (Alan Cross recalls it was from his army
service), to resume a well-informed conversation with a client
usually on railway matters.
The rear of the terrace
incorporating Lens - the shop is on the left of the
picture.
Photograph by permission of
Sutton and East Surrey Water.
As regular, if low-spending, schoolboy
visitors in the mid-sixties, we browsed the treasure trove of
books, magazines, models and especially photographs for hours, yet
never felt under any pressure to make way for more profitable
customers. John Smith was himself a prolific photographer of
railway subjects - less so of buses - but he also accumulated
negatives from many other photographers to build the huge ‘Lens of
Sutton’ collection.
By some accounts, the ‘Lens’ name alluded to
the lens of a camera. But the truth is that the business was
established around 1927 by T. Lens and the shop was taken over by
John Smith in 1948. The front of the shop gave no clue to its
seemingly precarious position clinging to the edge of a deep pit
known, somewhat ambitiously, as Langley Park Lagoon (see top
photograph). There were glimpses of a chalky landscape from a
rear window - the pit having long been used by the Sutton District
Water Company as a depositary for chalk extracted in the water
softening process.
Inevitable redevelopment forced Lens to
relocate to 4 Westmead Road, Carshalton, east of the old LT
depot. John Smith died in 1999 but the Lens name lives on in
his photographic collection now dispersed to other
caretakers.
Lloyd Rich went from being a young customer to a friend of John
L Smith, and describes him as 'a wonderful character and a very
interesting and generous man'. His Flickr set of photos,
Lloyd's tribute to John, are
here.
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The original shop,after its closure in the late
70s.
Photo © Lloyd Rich
The late John L Smith, in the
inevitable beret.
Photo © Lloyd Rich
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