From origins in post WW2 trading The Mansfield Leather Company started retail trading on Station Street in the 1950s. The building is now demolished, below the Railway Inn. When new shops were built on Regent Street Alan Packer (my father) took the bold decision to move The Leather Shop to no.26. Sports goods became an increasing part of the business that had included handicrafts, luggage, handbags, purses, wallets and leather clothing. Membership of the international marketing group Intersport was achieved shortly before Alan’s death in 1975. I continued the business in Regent Street and later on Westgate until the Company closed in 2000.
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I worked for Intersport from 1988 until its’ demise in 2001 and have fond memories of delivering to both Packer Sports shops right through the 1990s.
We lived next door to Mona and Alan Packer on Berry Hill Rd. and exchanged Christmas cards with Mona from the USA until her passing.
I bought a full Mansfield Town football uniform for my two young sons from the Regent St. store, also a full snooker ball set, which was a great novelty in the USA when I tried to explain the game on a pool table.
Alan and my mother, Olive, were Coxmoor Captains in 1960 I think. Good memories.
I started work in 1957 as a trainee mechanic at the Midland Garage on Station Street, owned by Stan Fowkes. It was directly across the road from the leather shop and I can remember Mansfield’s somewhat eccentric sign writer Jack Riley actually painting the logo shown in the first picture, clad in his trademark beret and artists smock.
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