| STATEBORDER | Site of a "Now Leaving" sign |
| RESTAURANT | Research by American leaving sign for social worker in place to eat (10) |
| MARKS | One of the two founders in Leeds in 1884 of a (now international) retail chain, d. 1907 (5) |
| SCREENGRAB | Evidence of a now-deleted email, perhaps |
| WASHINGPOWDER | Possibly showed a grip now leaving nothing as a hygienic necessity? (7,6) |
| MEASLES | Saleswomen now leaving organisation because of illness (7) |
| HERETOFORE | Until now, leaving the lady, too, free to wander? |
| PEEPBO | A "now you see me, now you don't" game delighted in by a tot or a baby; or, if rearranged, a shepherdess they sing about, maybe (4-2) |
| COD | Be it a popular white food-fish possibly caught with a hackle, or a now-obsolete word for a bag, they are both associated with tackle (3) |
| MONET | His house in Giverny is a now a museum |
| FAXES | Transmits a document in a now-obsolete phone-based way |
| CHATTO | Described as the queen of English horticulture, late plantswoman who started a now public garden at Elmstead Market in Essex in 1967 (6) |
| LEVEN | Loch near Kinross with a now ruined castle where Mary, Queen of Scots was imprisoned in 1567 (5) |
| EYNHALLOW | A now uninhabited islet off Mainland Orkney, originally believed to be the summer home of the Finfolk (9) |
| ARIEL | A now controversial statue of prospero and ___ by Eric Gill has adorned the BBC's Broadcasting House since 1933 (5) |
| BEAGLE | With a now extinct "pocket" type prized by Henry VII and Elizabeth I, a hound originally bred to hunt hare (6) |
| SPRY | Society florist who helped design the flowers at Queen Elizabeth II's coronation and co-devised a now- famous chicken dish for a luncheon following said royal ceremony (4) |
| QUECHUA | Amazonian native a€“ now also a French camping equipment brand (7) |
| ASBESTOSIS | Lung condition caused by a now-banned form of insulation (10) |
| REEFERS | Reasons for madness, in a now-cult 1936 film |