About: P.H. Vine   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/8o1p8DBc7tTqR4sOpNWJXA==, within Data Space : dbkwik.org associated with source dataset(s)

P.H. Vine was Alan Howard's accountant. In the summer of 1970, Alan's financial affairs reached the stage where he was in danger of being declared a bankrupt and Mr Vine called a meeting of all of his creditors to offer them a voluntary arrangement whereby they would be paid back some nine shillings in the pound on the £5,132 he owed them, pointing out that if the matter went before the courts, the sum they received could be considerably less. Belligerent Willie Piggott was at the packed meeting and attempted his best to stir things up for Alan but Vine's calmness as chairman of the meeting and the support of Len Fairclough carried the day.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • P.H. Vine
rdfs:comment
  • P.H. Vine was Alan Howard's accountant. In the summer of 1970, Alan's financial affairs reached the stage where he was in danger of being declared a bankrupt and Mr Vine called a meeting of all of his creditors to offer them a voluntary arrangement whereby they would be paid back some nine shillings in the pound on the £5,132 he owed them, pointing out that if the matter went before the courts, the sum they received could be considerably less. Belligerent Willie Piggott was at the packed meeting and attempted his best to stir things up for Alan but Vine's calmness as chairman of the meeting and the support of Len Fairclough carried the day.
dcterms:subject
Number of Appearances
  • 1(xsd:integer)
First Appearance
  • 1970-08-19(xsd:date)
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dbkwik:coronations...iPageUsesTemplate
Character Name
  • P.H. Vine
Played By
Occupation
  • Accountant
abstract
  • P.H. Vine was Alan Howard's accountant. In the summer of 1970, Alan's financial affairs reached the stage where he was in danger of being declared a bankrupt and Mr Vine called a meeting of all of his creditors to offer them a voluntary arrangement whereby they would be paid back some nine shillings in the pound on the £5,132 he owed them, pointing out that if the matter went before the courts, the sum they received could be considerably less. Belligerent Willie Piggott was at the packed meeting and attempted his best to stir things up for Alan but Vine's calmness as chairman of the meeting and the support of Len Fairclough carried the day. By January 1972, Alan's affairs were in a somewhat better order and he tried to raise the money to buy the Canal Garage from Billy Walker. He told Elsie Howard that Vine had arranged the loan but she questioned him directly and was told that he'd been unsuccessful. She was furious later to learn that Alan's ex-wife Laura Howard had lent him the money. Credited as "Mr Vine", the character gave his initials in dialogue.
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