Several readers have been in touch about a photograph we featured a couple of weeks ago which showed a double decker bus looming through thick fog in York.

It was dated December 27, 1962: but could anyone tell exactly where it was, we asked?

Chris Moorey emailed to say the bus appeared to be going under the Bar Walls opposite Rougier Street on its way to Fulford on the no 4 route.

Philip Wells had even more information.

"I think the bus has come down Station Avenue, has turned under the arch in the Bar Walls and is about to cross into Rougier Street," he said in an email.

"It’s a 4A (from Acomb) on its way to (Fulford) Broadway, as it says on its destination board, via Station and Clifford Street.

"It’s a York-West Yorkshire bus, in the 1930s York Corporation entered a joint venture with the Tilling Group of companies. The company was effectively nationalised after the war and became the main transport provider in this part of the world.

"The bus itself looks like a Bristol K5G dating from 1939 but with a new body added in the mid 1950s."

Former Evening Press advertising representative Peter Pink, meanwhile, called in about another old photograph we carried ion the same day: the one showing Davygate and the York City Tailors.

The shop was one of his regular clients, he recalled: and it was managed by a man he knew only as Paddy, who was always beautifully turned out.

Mr Pink was able to confirm, as we suspected, that the business was nothing to do with York City football club.

"They were a proper gentleman’s tailor," he said.