It was difficult to find Ada's Terrace at first, as there seemed to be several, and two were close to one another. There was an Ada's Terrace off Seaton Street - the Hull City Council Image Archive has photos of it, which I showed to my mother, thinking I'd found photos of the (now demolished) place where she grew up. But I was wrong - she remembered front gardens - and this photo didn't show any.
But a little further south, there was an Ada's Terrace off St Paul's Street. It's not named on the 1928 map I have, but old directories available online have enabled me to locate it. Post-war clearance seems to have removed all traces of this street and many others nearby.
It was somewhere slightly to the north of Brunswick Avenue - before that street was truncated. As far as I can see from comparing old maps, St Paul's Street used to run directly down to meet Brunswick Avenue, and continued on southwards, to the church (St Paul's) that it was obviously named after.
Next to the church was a school, which my mother - and, she thinks, her mother - went to. On the corner, the 1928 map shows a timber yard, where my mum (born 1931) used to play as a child.
Doris Lamb and her family lived at Ada's Terrace until the late 1930s/early 40s. The area was severely affected by the 2nd World War bombing and their house was one of many to be damaged.