View of business premises at 33-34 Milk Street, City of London. The ground floor of number 33 is occupied by John Terry & Co. Ltd, wholesale woollen merchants and shippers. The building is abandoned, with some window panes broken, and a large sign on the front announces a rebuilding of the premises and relocation of the business to Russia Court nearby. R.C. Hall, tailor, occupies the first floor, signs in the windows advertising the business as 'golf coat specialists' and also announcing a move. 'D. Johnston Herbert Dean' occupies the second floor. An ornate lamp is mounted on the corner of the building. Number 34, with a passage adorned with iron-wrough gate leading to Mitre Court and a Gothic-style doorway, is the premises of G. Blackburn, furrier, with a show room advertised in the windows; and Thomas Meadows & Co. Ltd, shipping and insurance specialists. None of these buildings exist; Milk Street was heavily bombed in the massive German air raid on 29 December 1940 and later completely redeveloped, with none of the original buildings remaining. It is now partly pedestrianised and lined with modern office blocks and businesses such as Metro Bank.