When I partook of school dinners in the 60's the cutlery was stamped "LCB".(I am assuming that it was the same in all schools). We never could work out what it stood for......does anyone know?
Google LCB and cutlery and you get hits for high quality german LCB cutlery - where LCB stands for Le Cordon Bleu!I don't remember anything about school dinners which could be described as cordon bleu.
It used to be said that the statue of the Black Prince had been placed in City Square , near the station, pointing South to tell all the southerners who've just got off the train to b****r off back down south!
blackprince wrote: Google LCB and cutlery and you get hits for high quality german LCB cutlery - where LCB stands for Le Cordon Bleu!I don't remember anything about school dinners which could be described as cordon bleu. This was stamped on the upperside of the cutlery and not discreetly on the underside like a maker's mark. We always thought it must mean "Leeds City ?????"
I can remember school cutlery with W.R.C.C. on it in Doncaster but I suspect that wouldn't be the case in Leeds - could it be the local precursor of the YPO?
simong wrote: I can remember school cutlery with W.R.C.C. on it in Doncaster but I suspect that wouldn't be the case in Leeds - could it be the local precursor of the YPO? Perhaps,Leeds Catering Board?
I wonder if the LCB could stand for Leeds County Borough, which was the name for Leeds until 1974 (though I think it was more correctly the County Borough of Leeds) when it became the City and Metropolitan Borough of Leeds.
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