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Acthorpe Top, Lincolnshire

Acthorpe Top maps

Historic maps of Acthorpe Top and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all Acthorpe Top maps

Acthorpe Top map

Historic map of Acthorpe Top

Lincolnshire map

Illustrated Victorian map of Lincolnshire

Acthorpe Top map

Historic Map of any Acthorpe Top postcode

Acthorpe Top maps
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Acthorpe Top photos

We have no photos of Acthorpe Top, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Louth

Acthorpe Top books

Displaying 3 of 6 books about Acthorpe Top and the local area.   View all Acthorpe Top books

Lincolnshire Living Memoires
Paperback
rrp £14  £11.20

Grantham Town and City Memories
Paperback
rrp £13  £10.40

Lincoln Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £13  £10.40

Acthorpe Top books
View all 6 Acthorpe Top and Lincolnshire books

Memories of Acthorpe Top

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Lincolnshire memories

Topliss drapers 1882-1975

I wonder if anyone remembers Topliss, 16 Mercer Row? It was there until 1975 when it was taken over by Boyes. It was probably the last shop in Britain to have a "cash railway" for taking customers' payments to the cashier and returning the change. The money travelled in a hollow wooden ball, like a croquet ball cut... [more]

Shared on 29 June 2006 by Andrew Buxton.

Black Horse Inn

The photograph of the High Street with the Black Horse Inn Sign in the foreground reminded me that one of my ancestors, Sims Briggs, was the landlord of the inn according to the 1881 Census. Some of the other members are interned in the churchyard including my 2x Great Grandmother Susannah Briggs, wife of John who also died in Ludford but... [more]

Shared on 05 August 2009 by Roland Briggs.

My friend Betty Avis

Many years ago when I was a young girl not long out of school, I started work in Grimsby along with Betty Avis who lived in Binbrook and travelled into work every day on the bus. I remember her very well and still see her with her headscarf on when she came to work.  he and I became goood friends and... [more]

Shared on 02 July 2009 by Jane Tetlow.

Henson ancestry

An ancester of mine, Edith Rebecca Henson, lived in Worlaby in the late 1800s/early 1900s in Low Road or Top Road, Worlaby. She lived with the Rusling family as a niece. She married Richard Frank Henson in 1905. They shared the same surname but were they related - maybe cousins? Richard came from Scawby. I would like to hear from anyone... [more]

Shared on 03 August 2009

Growing up

North Somercotes played a large part in my growing up, I lived with my parents, sister and brother on the Lakeside Lido in St Annes Avenue, next to my friend Cherry Mayfield. I particularly remember when we both had chickenpox and our mothers ran a line through our bedroom windows so we could play noughts and crosses back and forth. [more]

Shared on 24 May 2009 by Linda Butler.

Calceby ... my soul mate.

Calceby... I came to live here in 1947, not a country girl by birth, having lived in Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire, for the first fourteen years of my life. This hamlet was to become my home for the next three years, isolated and  buried in the heart of the wolds. I came to know every part of the landscape, and walking... [more]

Shared on 28 May 2008 by Barbara Johnson.

is this the watch tower

I wonder if anyone can tell me if the tall black object in the distance in this photo is the coastguard watch tower which was at the top of Sea Lane throught the war and into the sixties or seventies. My grandfather was an auxiliary coastguard at Saltfleet during the war before moving to Donna Nook. My sister and I spent... [more]

Shared on 30 July 2008 by Janice Edwards.

happy days

my husband and i were tenants of the old hewitts brewery at the crown inn ror about two years in the sixties we had some marvellous characters as regulars the appleby brothers what jokers, herman the butcher len the baker jim the estate agent strum the plumber whacker from the garage and lots of caravanners from sheffield and nottingham... [more]

Shared on 29 November 2007 by Dorothy Atkinson.

Extracts From Acthorpe Top & Lincolnshire books

Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Acthorpe Top, inspired by Frith photos.

Boston - A History & Celebration

Plans are also under way for economic developments that should benefit the privately owned port of Boston and the people and businesses dependent on it. During 2005 Lincolnshire Development, part of Lincolnshire County Council, prepared a bid for European funding under Objective 2 for the Boston Southern Enterprise Zone in the Marsh Lane area south of the dock. This would fund the construction of a dock link road, and the commissioning... [more]

This is an extract from Boston - A History & Celebration.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Boston - A History & Celebration

On a happy day in August 1916 Alice Oldrid, one of four sisters who then owned the famous drapers shop in Boston, married Alan James Derrick of Redcar on Teesside, a 2nd Lieutenant in the 7th Reserve Batallion of the Northumberland Fusiliers.

This is an extract from Boston - A History & Celebration.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Boston - A History & Celebration

The direct involvement of the civilian population in the horrors of war might be one of the factors contributing to the decline of religious belief and worship during the 20th century. When the Centenary Methodist Chapel was destroyed by fire on 24 June 1909, the congregation responded magnificently and the new chapel on the site was re-opened in 1911, and is still in use. However since then many churches and chapels... [more]

This is an extract from Boston - A History & Celebration.
Read more and see photos from this book.

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