From corn boy the men were promoted to Male Assistant, then First Hand followed by Assistant Manager and eventually to Manager. To be employed by the Co-op was a much sought after position and, providing that you behaved yourself, was a job for life with good pay including holiday and sick pay. On entering service with the Co-op you could join the union who would look after your interests.
There were many assistants in the shop, each able to add up in their heads the total of the customers shopping that they had served them with. No self-service or tills that added up for you in those days! The money in this particular shop was dispatched to the office across the ceiling in a vacuum-tube where the change would be put in and the tube sent back.
One weekend in late May 1934 the shop was raided and more than 2000 cigarettes were stolen. The then manager, Mr Ernest Hopkins, opened the shop on the Monday morning to discover a hole in the roof of the warehouse at the rear of the shop and the cigarettes missing. The culprit was subsequently apprehended by the police in Bristol.
Mr. Large worked at several Co-ops in the town eventually becoming manager of this branch. When the Co-op moved further up the road to bigger premises in about 1940 he moved with them, retiring in 1975 after more than 50 years service.
During the Second World War the Co-op’s premises, which they still owned, was used to billet some of the servicemen based in the town. After the War the building was again used by the Co-op until the late 1950s but was now a vegetable warehouse.
For a short time in the early 1960s these premises became the Cheltenham branch of Harpers Garage. Harper’s dealt in second hand cars and had their main branch in Gloucester.
In 1965 a very well established name came to Bath Road. The corn and seed merchant Bloodworth and Son closed their Albion Street shop and made the Bath Road their registered office.
The Bloodworth family came from Uley and the founder of the company, James, was born there about 1828. James started the business in Albion Street as the Cheltenham Machine and Hygienic Bakery at the end of the 1840s. The bakery was very large, employing only the best workmen, who used the most modern equipment and the highest quality ingredients thus making it one of the very best in the county. Many a local baker did their apprenticeships here including Dick Cripps from the bakery on the corner of Upper Bath Street.
In addition to the bakery, Bloodworths did an extensive trade in hay, straw and animal feeds and this department was situated adjoining the bakery in Albion Street. Bloodworth’s supplied many local farmers with their animal feeds. Both businesses prospered and new branches were opened in Gloucester and Winchcombe although eventually the company concentrated on the corn merchants side of the business and the bakery closed.
In the early 1960s Bloodworths established a mill in Leckhampton Road (near to the railway station) where they manufactured their animal feeds and soon after, they took over the shop at 158 Bath Road. During their stay of over thirty years, Bloodworths did a good trade as garden sundriesmen and established an excellent pet centre. Although the shop closed on January 17th 1998, Bloodworths still remains in the Bath Road, transferring the business to 180 Bath Road to join Newmans hardware store and become Bloodworth and Newman.
After lying empty for over a year, in May 1999 it was leased by insurance brokers Bird Warwick Brown and in 2014 is a branch of Coral Bookmakers.