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Tuesday
May262020

Garland Bros. Ltd. – gone but not forgotten

In better days: Garland Bros. Ltd advert 1970 [click to see]Whilst trawling through my archives of Practical Electronics magazines – I was compiling some PDFs of the 1970/ 71 PE Gemini amplifier for a reader  – I stumbled across an advert for a supplier named Garland Bros. Ltd.  who were located in London. Their black and white ad showed an impressive shop storefront, enhanced by signs overhead sporting a shopping list of many of the electronic components that they sold. 'South-east London's leading component store', their ad. exclaimed.

Before the Internet made the world a whole lot smaller, independent component stores like these were a critical part of the hobby electronics scene. Apart from serving local trade, many of them offered a valuable postal service that enabled constructors to obtain parts by mail order. At one time, there were so many such suppliers jostling to advertise that Practical Electronics magazine had to turn them away due to insufficient page space.

That 1970’s advert got me thinking...  could I find the store today? What had become of it? A major clue was provided in the address: Deptford Broadway, corner of Brookmill Road in London. Thanks to Google Maps I located it here, open for business (2008): https://goo.gl/maps/YV33qjYSDtJNMCcn6

It has, sad, to say, gone the way of pretty much every independent electronics store in Britain, as well as larger retail chains like Maplin. It is looking very sorry for itself and boarded up here: https://goo.gl/maps/cQsfAuKehk71o2QX9

Companies House showed the limited company was established in 1951 and dissolved in 2012 after a good run of 60 years.

No doubt legions of enthusiasts passed through their doors during those decades when business was brisk. Here’s a ‘thank you’ to all those hard-working independent stores that diligently served hobbyists for so long, supplying all their component needs during the halcyon days of hobby electronics. I salute you all!

  • If you have any memories of this or other stores, feel free to leave a comment below. (Post a Comment link at top ^)
  • Search my site for details of Maplin Electronics and Watford Electronics, two stalwarts of the 1970s-80’s- 90’s electronics scene.
  • How times are a-changing: just around the corner on Brookmill Road I found this old car wash: https://goo.gl/maps/4WGDaRbmUQ95BkNX7  and ten years later it's turned into this. A tatty old electricity substation is still there!

Reader Comments (2)

First went in there with my dad when I was a child to buy a reel of quarter inch tape for our new fidelity tape recorder. This was about 1967. Then a few years later I went in with a blueprint for a practical wireless 4 channel mixer and ordered all the parts I needed. I remember when it came to the knobs for the mixer they brought out a board with all kinds of different designs of knobs stuck to it so you could choose the style you wanted. In the 1980s I bought a wooden case for twin deck disco console which was later fitted out as a radio studio for a station called London rock that was on the air in from crystal palace in 1982. I lived fairly close to the shop in Sydenham and was always dropping down there to buy a components I needed to build transmitters and bits and pieces. Sad it's gone now

July 21, 2021 at 21:34 | Unregistered CommenterHoward Wilson

Bought my very first component there ( circa 1975 ), me and my cousin used to go there most Saturdays for all sorts of components.
The guys behind the counter were really helpful and knowledgable and always willing to help, big shout out to them!
Sad to see it's gone but I guess that's the way of things now, people don't make when they can buy from ebay :(

February 5, 2022 at 13:53 | Unregistered CommenterK D Hedger

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