Walk into the complete 1880s pharmacy, sense the atmosphere and
visualise the pills and potions being dispensed to treat nineteenth
century maladies.
This pharmacy was made to measure by George Treble & Son, shop fitters,
Hoxton, London to the order of Mr Deeks, High Street, Shanklin, I.o.W. It was
made in their workshops and then sent by rail and ferry to be fitted into No.47
The High Street, sometime in the 1880's.
The ownership changed a few times over the next 100 years and the shop was
closed around the end of 1990 when the fittings were then sold. The complete
shop interior, with many of the glass jars and bottles, was purchased in the
winter of 1991/92 and the building erected to fit.
The nest of drawers at the back is called the "drug run" and is 25 feet long,
one of the longest to be found in this country. Another nice feature is the two
shop chairs monogrammed on the backrest with the letter "D" for Deeks. These
were supplied when the shop was fitted out.
We have tried to get the feel of the pharmacy as it would have been at
some stage of its life and to get you, our visitors, right into it. However, the
contents and doors etc. have had to be alarmed in the interests of safety and
security.
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