E.A. Clare Son Ltd
2021
Announcement
As a result of a review during the '2020
Covid-19 Lockdown' it was decided that the retail outlet in
Liverpool be closed and that all the sales should be carried out
via the eshop. The Birmingham office was also closed

The full range of snooker/pool
tables and accessories, including Bingo, Darts and Trophies are
available at :- www.thurston.co.uk
and phone lines orders handled during
office hours but also just leave a message at any other time just
phone - +44 (0)151 482 2700
The 'old' retail
space has been transformed into the biggest showroom for Pool &
Snooker Tables in the North West - just give us a call on 0151 482
2700 to arrange a VIP appointment to select the Pool or Snooker
table that is right for your home.


Reluctantly at the same time due to the
lack of service work with the clubs being closed due to the
lockdowns the Service/fitting work also was withdrawn.
Snooker, Billiards &
Pool in Liverpool
As the oldest snooker / pool / billiard business on
Merseyside in 2012 celebrated it's 100th anniversary , the
grandson of the founder has compiled some of it history complete
with pictures of the personalities including the staff and managers
over the years. The Company was founded in Fraser Street not half a
mile from the current premises in St. Anne Street and so has been
part of the local Everton district community for all its
history.
E.A. Clare & Son
Ltd
trading as
THURSTON, Drakes Pride &
PERADON
Incorporates :
E.A. Clare & Son Ltd ( Est.
1912)
Thurston & Co (Est. 1799)
Darlington (Est. 1820)
Thos. Padmore & Sons (Est.
1830)
Fitzpatrick & Longley (Est.
1843)
William Bayliff (Est. 1847)
J. Ashcroft & Co. (Est.
1869)
Chas. Parker & Son (Est.
1879)
Peradon (Est. 1885)
Van Laere sprl. (Est. 1896)
E.L. Fletcher & Son (Est.
1920)
MacMorran (Est. 1923)
Weildings (Est. 1922)
Drakes Pride (Est. 1982)
Leslie J. Brice & Son (Est
1971)
Where to start was the problem, so some information about the
founder, Edward Arthur Clare's, usual known as Arthur, early years
seems appropriate. He was born in 1882 at 32 Hornby Avenue. His
father David Thomas Clare being a prison officer at Walton Jail at
the time, having retired from the sea due to ill health.

The young E.A.
Clare
E. A. Clare circa
1912
Arthur's father died when Arthur was still quite young so at the
age of 14 he left school in 1896 went looking for a job. He saw a
sign saying boy wanted in the well known Liverpool business of J.
Ashcroft & Co. at their Billiard Company's Victoria Street
building.
This illustration of the
Ashcroft building was printed in 'The Builder' April 1883
He was hired and thus started his
apprenticeship in the Billiard (Snooker) trade. (In the 1970's
Norman Clare, Arthur's son, was pleased to be able to acquire the
snooker/billiard interests of Ashcroft's when Peter Ashcroft - the
great grandson of the founder of the business - retired)
At that time Arthur joined the firm
the Liverpool fruit and vegetable market was in the same area as
Ashcroft's and one of his 'stories' was that it was his job to
empty the rat traps. He drowned the rats in a water butt on the
roof and then, so he said, flung them onto the roof across the road
- in those days it was the GPO now the back of the Met
Quarter!
At some point Arthur had an argument
with Mr. Ashcroft and was sacked! He then tried his hand as a
joiner, working for a Southport business and it seems from a
reference provided by Kiddie & Co. Ltd he might have also
worked for Lancs. & Yorks. Railway.
Kiddie & Co. Ltd. still
operate as shop fitters etc. in Southport
We were also told that for a short time he worked as a joiner
for Harland & Wolf, the famous ship builders, probably at their
Liverpool works, but have no evidence of that. However he did
get a job, some time in 1904, with the Manchester based Billiard
Company called Orme & Sons, becoming one of their Irish
representatives based in the north of Ireland (before the
partition). He must have done quite well and even had some of his
work reported in the local papers
Published in the 'Connaught
Telegraph Saturday July 8th 1911
During his time in Ireland he told of selling the round
table that Ormes offered and also that those he sold were quite
quickly offered back as they were found to be a gimmick. He
continued working for Ormes in Ireland until 1912.

The Belfast address must have
been Arthur's base in Ireland. It is also interesting to note that
Orme's had a Liverpool office as well as London & Glasgow. On
resigning he did obtain a reference from Orme's which, was as
you can see short and to the point!

This reference seems to
indicate that E.A. Clare worked for them
from about the age of
21.
He was able to save during his period in Ireland and another of
his stories related to when he tried to open a bank account. The
story goes that the bank manager seeing him in his working clothes
took him to the door of the bank and pointed out the Post Office -
saying that was the place to open an account for a working man.
Arthur did not have a high opinion of banks after that
experience!
When, in 1912 he returned to Liverpool he had sufficient funds
to start his own Billiard business with small premises at 15 Fraser
Street, just off London Road. His mother looked after the shop in
Fraser Street whilst he did the fitting and servicing work.
In 1913 he married his long time Liverpool girlfriend Bessie
Woolfenden. He must have been reasonably successful and after about
eight years he required larger premises and so moved to St. Anne
Street in about 1920
15 Fraser
Street where it all began - Picture
taken by Norman Clare in about 1970 . It is interesting
to note that the building to the left with the diamond shapes in
the brick works was the remains of the drill halls of the Liverpool
Scottish Regiment HQ. The small picture of the building below shows
the drill hall on the right of the building. For those of a certain
age the druill hall section will be remembered as the night club
-Mr. Pickwicks !




He moved to rented premises at
22 St. Anne Street Liverpool 3. We have a price list
from that time and business card that he issued. Also an advert
from "The Billiard Player" magazine dated 1923, which confirms the
likely date for the Price List. Sadly we do not have any picture of
those premises, nor a picture of the Works at 43 St. Anne Street (
the works at 43 St. Anne street must have been almost oposite the
current address (2018) of the business .
Sometime during this period he
purchased stock and fittings from two old Liverpool Billiard firms
who were closing. The first was T. Sowerby & Sons, whose
business was in Mount Pleasant

An early bone or ivory Billiard
Table plate
In fact we still have as a display case a glass fronted unit
which has cut, freehand, into the glass the name Thomas Sowerby
& Sons. The picture of the Sowerby premises and staff was
kindly provided by a member of their family in 2008, who had been
researching their ancestry.
16 Mount Pleasant -
Sowerby's shop and works
The other business was the other long established Liverpool
Billiard firm called William Bayliff whose billiard table
plate, again bone or possibly ivory, states that they were
established in 1847

The advert is taken from The
"Graphic" Portfolio, Liverpool 11th Issue
dated 1884-85
Further information has been found which would date the purchase
of Bayliff's stock etc. to 1926, as can been seen by the letter
sent to Mr. E.A. Clare in that year.

Another of E.A. Clare's 'stories' was that the landlord
wanted him out of those premises at 22 St. Anne Street so removed
the slates from the building forcing him to find alternative
accommodation.

Picture in club where E.A. Clare
had supplied the table
So in about 1925 He was able to purchase a building at 27 St.
Anne Street and set up his shop and workshop in that building. One
strange fact was that the small street that ran at the back of his
business was 'Back Clare Street'! In the map circa 1927 Back Clare
Street ran from Springfield to Clare Street!


Early Price List circa
1932

E.A. Clare shop premises 27 St.
Anne Street
During this period he opened eight Billiard Halls in
Liverpool and in and around Birkenhead which were very
successful and so he further expanded his premises to include 25
St. Anne Street. Also in the late 1920's early 1930's he introduced
a maintenance contract to help clubs with the payments spread over
the year.
Monthly Billiard Table
renovation contracts offered to clubs
List of E.A. Clare run Billiard
Halls
He even advertised on tram
tickets as well as using calling card to promote his business as
shown below

Liverpool Tram
Ticket

The calling card that E.A. Clare
left with customers
Pictures of the inside of the building along with the staff were
taken to be used in catalogues and promotion material. We know the
names of some of the staff in the pictures have been named and so
are listed below the photographs.

Noted as - THE LARGE
SHOWROOM
Noted as - BILLIARD DINING
TABLE SMALL SHOWROOM
E.A. Clare standing in his
shop doorway of 27 St. Anne Street
L-R
Leslie Proctor, Jimmy Warren,
Jack Winstanley, Jimmy Croper(/),Syd Emery,Charlie Lyons, Dick
O'Donnell, Leslie McNee, N.Clare(arm only), Dick
Coleridge

L-R
Jimmy Warren, Dick Coleridge,
Leslie Proctor, Leslie McNee, Dick O'Donnell

Jimmy Warren - Works Foreman for
E.A. Clare
Norman Clare making 'Billiard Light
Shades'

These two pictures,above, show E. A.
Clare 25/27 St. Anne Street premises in January 1940. The top
picture was taken from the corner of Springfield, alongside the
Holy Trinity Church which was demolished in 1969. The lower
picture was taken from the junction of St. Anne Street with
Islington.
The ports around the Mersey were
heavily bombed but fortunately the business premises didn't suffer
too badly and even the Billiard Halls survived despite being close
to some damaged buildings. You can see in this picture one of the
Halls - with the ERALC name (ERALC is Clare backwards and was used
as a brand name by the business for many years).
Birkenhead 1940
Arthur's son Norman joined the
business in 1930 learning all aspect of the trade and so in 1935,
when Norman reach the age of 21 the business name was changed to
E.A. Clare & Son. At that time the business's trade mark showed
that Billiards was still the predominate game with little evidence
of snooker

E.A. Clare & Son Trade Mark
pre 1940
Sometime in this period E.A. Clare thought it would make
good business sense to sell Crown Green Bowls. He was a resonable
club level player of the game winning several tankards at his club.
He was even portrayed, along with other club members, in a
Liverpool Echo cartoon in 1954. It is a good likness showing him in
his flat cap with a cigarette in his mouth!

Published in the Liverpool Echo July
24th 1954
(The blue arrow points to E.A.
Clare)
The war years were also quite difficult for the small firm with
Norman being away in the Army and Arthur was ill for long periods.
The business was held together by Miss Ethel Paterson, who must
have been quite a formidable lady who efficiently kept the books,
coped with air raids and the staff as well as the material
shortages. She basically ran the firm until Arthur was fit
and Norman returned after the war in 1946.
Norman took over the day to day running of the business on his
return but with the continued expansion further staff were
required. As was very much a family run business, Arthur's daughter
Kathleen joining as the cashier and one of his son-in-laws Kenneth
McCormick also joining the business after the War. Ken, as he was
known, was in charge of the buying and cost control.
L - R
Ken McCormick and his wife
Dorothy McCormick (Norman's sister), Betty Clare and Norman
Clare
(looks like they had been
attending a wedding)
1952 Professional Players Dinner
- Park Lane Hotel
L -R Fred Davis,
Norman Clare & Betty Clare

Top Billiard players of the
day when in Liverpool would visit the E.A. Clare premises - the
picture above, taken in 1958, shows two such players. On the left
Jack Moyniham; in the middle Clark McConacy and on the right Sid
Emery the shop manager at the time. The picture below taken
on the same day shows Norman Clare standing between the two
Billiard Players.

Norman, who was by this time very
experienced in the trade thought he was on safe ground when he in
1953 expressed disbelief at being told by a customer that a
Billiard table was installed on a ship. Norman felt that given the
ships movements and the effect on the tables level that this would
not be possible. He was proved wrong and didn't mind that it cost
him a billiard table as he made sure he got news coverage from it.
The articles and letters follow.
The letter confirming the
information and advising of another ship with a table on
board!
The form that was
returned with the letter from Captain Main - completed by The
THURSTON fitter in Plymouth
Norman then made sure of some coverage of the fact that he had
'lost' his wager and had thus supplied a Snooker table to the
gentleman whose story he had not believed. Norman sent on all the
papers to the local newspaper who ran the story as did a couple of
the National newspapers

Little did Norman know that some years
after his death the Heritage Collection of Billiard / Snooker books
and memorabilia that he founded would be presented with a copy of
H. W.
Stevenson's scrap book. One of the booklets in the scrap
book refers to exhibition of Billiards that he undertook in 1917 on
battleships and cruisers of the Grand Fleet. He list quite a number
of vessels but noted that the tables were not full size which made
his displays more difficult! (see Past Master No.7)
Works & Yard
back of 25/27 St. Anne Street, actually in Back Clare Street. The
picture was used in the E.A. Clare catalogues and had been modified
to take out the other business entrances, by inserting a brick
walls behind the two bigger vans! Circa 1952.

An early export of a
table going to Dar-Es-Salam
L - R - Ken
McCormick, Dennis Jones, Billy Hull, Ritchie Littler circa
1952
The business continued to grow and in
the late 1950's this further expansion by the purchased 23 St. Anne
Street. This enabled them to set up their first bowls test table
and become recognised as the leading crown green bowls business in
the North of England.
L to R - Arthur Ayres
- Norman Money -Peter Bacon - Bill Walsh
The bowls department
in1963 - showing the test table

Bowl department 1963 -
Bill Walsh & Arthur Ayres - testing bowls

Another view of the bowls
department
The Cabinet Shop, wood
working part of the factory was also moved into the 27 St. Anne
Street part of the site. Circa 1963

Bar Billiard Tables being
prepared for export to Guyana in 1960
L - R Ken Harry,
Jimmy Griffiths
Back Clare Street
1967
Showing the back of 23-27 St. Anne Street. The first floor at
the back of the building was street level at the front. So from the
doors shown at the back they led through to cellars at the front,
where the slates for the Billiard / Snooker tables were
stored.
The firm celebrated its
Golden Anniversary in 1962 with a celebration dinner for the staff
and some members of the trade.


E. A. Clare as an old man
The founder E.A. Clare was a very proud man on that night, sadly
in April 1963 , after a short illness, he died. The following
article was published in the Billiard & Snooker magazine in
July of that year. Although the article gives a brief history
there are some errors! eg. It states that No 22 St. Anne Street was
demolished after the 1914-18 war. Yet it also says that E. A. Clare
was in Fraser street for 8 years, which would mean he moved out of
those premises in 1920 some 2 years after 22 St. Anne Street was
demolished and would have also thought any bombing of Liverpool in
1914-18 war would have been serious news!

Also in 1963 the trade mark was updated so that it incorporated
and depicted the other departments within the business, whilst
retaining the design style of the original. At one time this trade
mark was incorporated in the floor covering the shop at 25 St. Anne
Street.

Note:- the Snooker Table (moving on
from billiards), bowls player, club furniture and the dart board
for club games
Some photographs of the
premises at 23/27 St. Anne Street in the 1960

The shop 23 -27 St. Anne Street
1967

The showroom in the 23
St.Anne Street section - 1967
The shop assistant's office,
entrance door to the offices & factory and the retail managers
office in the 25 St. Anne Street section - 1967
the General Office - 1967
Two view of St. Anne Street in 1967
- the picture above is taken from the Islington end of the
street.

This picture taken from just passed
Springfield, Holy Trinity Church is just off the picture on the
left, looking back toward Islington
In the early 1960's Norman and Ken (his brother-in law) who were
now partners together were looking for further expansion and were
able to acquire the trading interests of two old Yorkshire Billiard
& Snooker firms - Chas Parker & Son and Fitzpatrick &
Longley. Both these businesses were absorbed into the Liverpool
operation.
L - R - Ken McCormick
& Norman Clare
Later in the early 1960's they were
approached by the still very famous and long established London
Billiard and Snooker business of Thurston (late of Leicester
Square) to see if they would be interested in acquiring the
business. In 1963 they bought out the business, which continued to
be run as a distinct entity under the then Managing Director Bob
Mitchell with Mr. Frank McDermott moving from Liverpool to help run
the operation. Although E. A. Clare & Son and Thurston were run
as separate businesses they used common catalogues all be it with
front covers with their separate names on them.
In the mid 1960's another approach this time from the best known
Midlands Billiard & Snooker company of Thos. Padmore & Sons
Ltd. So in 1966 the partners in E. A. Clare & Son took a
controlling interest in Padmore's. In the mid 1970's the group of
Companies dropped the separate front/back covers for the catalogues
and traded as CLARE-PADMORE- THURSTON . The catalogues of that time
use that title but they were still run as separate businesses but
there was a 'group' sales and buying.
In the 1960's Norman's son-in-law, Peter Eggington, joined
the firm and later his son Peter Clare (Arthur's grandson) also
joined. It was certainly a family business at that time, as
Norman's sister Kathleen was the Chief cashier with Norman's
brother-in-law Ken being Works Manager!
In 1968/9 there was a massive up heaval, the Liverpool City
Council had been planning for an inner ring road which was to have
basically across Scotland Road from the Docks, coming up to
St. Anne Street as an elevated road just passed the Police Station
(which was built with this road in mind as it was to face it, so
that when the road was cancelled the Police Station seemed to have
been built the wrong way as its back faced St. Anne Street!). The
road was then going to run along Norton Street and on to
Rodney Street. This meant that the buildings on the side of St.
Anne Street that E. A. Clare & Son was on were earmarked for
demolition.
Norman & Ken had to find alternate
accommodation for their business and eventual were lucky enough to
be able to purchase the old Lamb & Watt building at 46/48 St.
Anne Street.
An early picture of the Lamb
& Watts building circa 1940
Lamb & Watts building
in 1967 as it was when purchased for the E .A. Clare & Son
business. It is situated on St. Anne Street with
Queen Anne Street running down the side of the building.
Lamb & Watts had been in the wine
and spirit business and in fact the premises had been used to
produce and store British Sherry before bottling it. The rafters
and timber structure of the building all had a wonderful
smell of 'sherry'. Sadly after the steam cleaning and building work
required the aroma disappeared! In 1969 when the new site was
opened the shop and factory looked the part as can be seen from the
picture below.
The 'new' premises open for business
11th February 1970.you can see that the firms van livery also
changed from the yellow that had been the colour for many years to
the bright orange shown on these vehicles.
Below are some other pictures of St.
Anne Street before the road was split into two different levels,
circa 1972.


A container being loaded with
full size tables bound for Sydney Australia
L - R
Mike Atherton, Paul Rumens,
Geoff Caton, unknown, unknown, Jimmy Davis, David Maguire, unknown,
Billy Hull, Dennis Jones, Richie Littler, Rob Curran, Alan Jervis

Unloading a container of slates
from the Italian quarry
L-R
Rob Campbelll, Tony McDonough,
Steve Cartledge, Keith Dixon, unknown
It wasn't until 1971 that the partners in the firm agreed that
the business should be incorporated and so November of that year it
became E. A. Clare & Son Ltd.
Ken McCormick, the Works Director, who had been Norman's right
hand man through out the expansion of the business, sadly died in
July 1978.
Norman, who had become very interested in the history of
Billiards & Snooker as a result of items he had found at the
Cheyne Walk premises of Thurston & Co. had developed quite a
collection of historical items and books relating to Billiards,
Snooker and Pool. He set up on the second floor room within the St.
Anne Street building a 'museum room'. This cause quite a lot of
interest in the media and the photography show part of the
room.
L-R - Peter Crail, Peter Eggington,
Peter Clare & Norman Clare
In 1980 the Company made what is probably the largest
Snooker/Billiard table in the World! It was a special order from
Thomas Taylor Bowls in Glasgow for a new bowls test table. It was 5
full size table assembled side by side making a 30ft x 12ft table.
The picture below shows the table assembled in St. Anne Street with
a 6ft domestic table on its bed.

L - R
Jim Davies; Mike Doran; Dennis
Jones; Glen Cockburn; Rob Curran; Peter Clare August 1980
When Norman Clare visited India in the
mid 1980's he took the opertunity to visit Billiard firms in
India. The Picture below shows Norman Clare breaking the
ground for the foundation stone for the new factory of the Indian
Billiard firm - Billiardiers Int - of New Delhi. We are not certain
the actual year but believe it was circa 1980. The gentleman on the
far left is Mr. Jashir Singh whose nephew Gurinder Singh now runs
the business.

In the late 1980's there was a boom in
the demand for snooker (billiard) tables in Europe, especially the
northern countries such as the Netherlands and Belgium. As a
result, in 1986, the famous Belgium Billiard business called
Van Laere was taken over and traded in Europe as Thurston -
Van Laere.
In 1987, Norman Clare was delighted to be approached by Peter
Ashcroft, who was wishing to retire and so dispose of his family
business. Given the fact that his father had learnt the trade at J.
Ashcroft & Co. Norman jumped at the chance and so the Snooker
& Billiard part of the Ashcroft business was absorbed into E.A.
Clare & Son. Ltd. The Ashcroft building still stands in
Victoria Street.
In the late 1980's , towards the end of 1988/beginning of 1989
the three companies E. A. Clare & Son Ltd., Thos. Padmore &
Sons Ltd and Thurston & Co. Ltd. formalised their trading
interest by E.A. Clare & Son Ltd. taking them over as the one
trading Company of E.A. Clare & Son Ltd. Norman, by then
Chairman and steeped in the history of the trade (see the article
about the museum) decided that the combined Company should trade as
THURSTON .

One of the Thurston vehicles
delivering itens for an exhibition in Europe
Sales folder used after the three
companies came to-gether under the Thurston trade name circa
1990

This name change still causes the people in Merseyside some
confusion as they know the shop as 'Clare's and the same is true in
Birmingham where they still ask for 'Padmores'! (Sadly due to
sales sifting to the internet the London shop was closed in 2011
and the Birmingham shop closed in 2012. The Liverpool shop remains
open and all internet sales despatches are made from
there).

The Liverpool premises and
Headquarters of the Business. Complete with the revised livery
style. Referred to as 'Clare House'
This did at least mean that all the
letterheads and other paper work had the one image and identity.
Liverpool was the head office and manufacturing base for the
business. With the offices in Birmingham and London ensuring that
local regional knowledge was maintained and customers enquires
could be promptly handled.

Padmore House
273/275 Lichfield Road, Birmingham B6 7QP (Shop closed in
2012)
London Office (The
shop closedin 2011)
110 High Street, Edgware

One of the fleet of service
vehicles
The Liverpool sales display was revamped in 2006 to include a
room for the display of fine quality restored tables. Prior to this
the area for display of tables was limited.

Liverpool showroom prior to 2006
refit
The table showroom after
refit

Pool & Snooker tables for the
home and a view of the best selection of cues in the North of
England

The bowls counter

The darts section

Trophies for all sports from Snooker
to Country Dancing!
E. A. Clare & Son has a long association with the Billiard
and Snooker Leagues in the Merseyside area and so over the
years many top players from this area have one league competitions.
John Parrott being one such player who went on to winning the World
Championship.
Norman Clare and John Parrott at the
Bootle League Presentation 1981
In 1990 after a short illness Norman
Clare died, the trade lost a great enthusiast for the industry who
also had a vast knowledge of the history of the sport. The
collection of Billiard and Snooker books and memorabilia has been
maintained in the Liverpool building and the rooms dedicated to it
have been named the Norman Clare Billiard & Snooker Heritage
Collection. Items from the collection were regularly displayed at
the Snooker World Championships in Sheffield in their Heritage
Room. Items have also featured on several T.V. Programmes and the
library has been used for research by a number of authors.
Edward Arthur Clare founded the business in 1912 the third
and forth generation of his family are now in the
business with his grandson peter Clare (Currently the Managing
Director) and his Great grandson Michael Eggington
who is the Sales Director for the trade division of the
Company.
In 2006 the shop area of was
refurbished enabling the display of a full range of Snooker
and Pool Tables as well as a special table area for the restored
antique tables. It was this room that in 2008 during Liverpool's
year as the European Capital of Culture a display, on the ground
floor of the St. Anne Street premises, of some of the memorabilia
was made. This Billiard & Snooker Heritage Collection is
unique in the UK and only the Heinrich Weingartner Museum in Vienna
compares with it, and that is devoted to carom billiards (the
European / American version of the game played on pocketless
tables). For more details about the collection and articles on the
early Billiard Players see Norman Clare articles

Part of the Heritage Collection on
display - Of particular note is Joe Davis's Cue seen above his
portrait
In January 2010 the UK
experienced snow fall over the whole of the Country and although
not as significant as shown in the 1940 pictures of St. Anne Street
it did cause disruption. The picture shows the Thurston shop and
factory on 6th January 2010.
Edward Arthur Clare founded the
business in 1912 so a quiet celebration of our 100 years will take
place during 2012. As the Company now uses three trade names -
Thurston, Peradon and Drakes Pride it would be a bit confusing to
try and make a big 'marketing' scheme of the date however
significant it is for the business!
The collection has been visited during
2013 by several televison production companies. The first being the
makers of the BBC series 'Antique Road Trip' who visited and filmed
in March 2013. The delightfull antique's expert Christina Trevanion
form Halls, arrived in a soft top Morris Minor and was filmed being
shown round the collection by Peter Clare.
Christina
Trevanion
A month later and Steve Davis came
with another team from the BBC , they were making a film on the
history of snooker and a couple of the segments were to be filmed
in our Liverpool premises. The two segments filmed , one on
cushions and the slates , the other on the balls, were shown during
the 2013 World Snooker Championships.

Steve Davis
admiribg the cue selection in the Liverpool display. The film
producer Chris Littleford (Freeland Producer on the BBC Snooker
team) can be seen looking at the monitor and cameraman Mark
Pert can also be seenon in the right forground.
In May
Jason Ferguson, WPBSA Chairman, brought over a party from China who
are very involved with Snooker in China. Mr. Liu Wei Senior
Jouralist from CCTV 5 China. Also in the party were Ms. Narissa
Wangof my147.com, a Billiard & Snooker on line magazine, the TV
cameraman from CCTV Mr. Wang Yinan and Jing Li (Salina) of World
Snooker Ltd. who is based in Beijing
L -R
Mr. Wang Yian;
Ms Narissa Wang; Jason Ferguson; Jing Li; Mr. Liu Wei
After Ronnie
Sullivan won the 2013 Betfair Snooker World Championships the cup
also visited the Liverpool showroom. The pictures below show it in
the Table Show room and also with Peter Clare ,Thurston MD, and
Mike Atherton, Thurston Snooker Manager, holding the cup in front
of the portrait that other gifted cueist Walter Lindrum.

Peter Clare
& Mike Atherton with the Betfair 2013 World Snooker
Championship Trophy
As shown earlier in the piece E.A.
Clare use to always print the following quotation by John Ruskin in
his catalogues -
"There is hardly anything in this
World which someone cannot make a little worse and sell a
little cheaper and people who consider price alone are this man's
lawful prey"
This quote is possibly even more relevant these days, we at
Thurston use only the highest quality materials and sell only items
that we consider value for money be they Snooker or Pool tables or
a set of darts, a pair of Crown Green Bowls or a set of Bingo
calling balls. To see the full range we offer visit our web site
:-
2021
Announcement
As a result of a review during the '2020
Covid-19 Lockdown' it was decided that the retail outlet in
Liverpool be closed and that all the sales should be carried out
via the eshop. The Birmingham office was also closed

The full range of snooker/pool
tables and accessories, including Bingo, Darts and Trophies are
available at :- www.thurston.co.uk
and phone lines orders handled during
office hours but also just leave a message at any other time just
phone - +44 (0)151 482 2700
The 'old' retail
space has been transformed into the biggest showroom for Pool &
Snooker Tables in the North West - just give us a call on 0151 482
2700 to arrange a VIP appointment to select the Pool or Snooker
table that is right for your home.


Reluctantly at the same time due to the
lack of service work with the clubs being closed due to the
lockdowns the Service/fitting work also was withdrawn.
www.thurston.co.uk
to contact us by phone
0151 482 2700
or
email - thurston@eaclare.co.uk
© E.A. Clare & Son Ltd.
2021.
Reproduction of this article allowed only with the permission from
E.A. Clare & Son Ltd.
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