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Abbotsham

Abbotsham photos (7 available)

Old photo of Abbotsham

Abbotsham maps (2 available)

Old map of Abbotsham

Abbotsham books (12 available)

Abbotsham memories

School Days

As a boarding pupil at Grenville College I used to walk up to Abbotsham in sunny summer weather from Moreton House with my Sunday packed lunch. It was a very quiet village and one of my main memories is the range of old carvings on the pews in the old church.

The village was also on the route of our cross-country runs and it was the point at which the final effort needed to be made to beat the visiting team.
Contributed by Roger Griffith

Abbotsham School In The 1960's

Abbotsham, the Village and Church c1960

Growing up at Fairy Cross, Alwington and as our village school had closed in the late 1950s we had to catch the school bus daily morning and afternoon to Abbotsham Primary School. (Shown in the centre back of the picture next to St Helens Church). I started in 1963 in the "little ones class" of the two roomed school. Mrs Elston was my first teacher there and she had also taught at Alwington School before it closed - Miss Ball was the headmistress throughout my time there. I can remember the outside boys toilet block in the playground (no flushing then) before they were replaced later in the decade and also there was an old victorian cloakroom (never used by us ...read more here
Contributed by Derek England

Family connections.

Abbotsham, the Village and Church c1960

This picture was actually taken in the early 1960's and later turned into a postcard. The man on the motorbike is my late father, John Ridd, who was a local farm manager at the time. The motorbike by the way is a BSA Bantam - he was the only person in the village who had one like it!
Contributed by Kelvin Ridd

Devon memories

Abbotsham School In The 1960's

Abbotsham, the Village and Church c1960

Growing up at Fairy Cross, Alwington and as our village school had closed in the late 1950s we had to catch the school bus daily morning and afternoon to Abbotsham Primary School. (Shown in the centre back of the picture next to St Helens Church). I started in 1963 in the "little ones class" of the two roomed school. Mrs Elston was my first teacher there and she had also taught at Alwington School before it closed - Miss Ball was the headmistress throughout my time there. I can remember the outside boys toilet block in the playground (no flushing then) before they were replaced later in the decade and also there was an old victorian cloakroom (never used by us ...read more here
A memory of Abbotsham contributed by Derek England

Extracts From Abbotsham & Devon books

Barnstaple, Green and Trinity Church c1871

The Green is now built over. This picture shows the Union Workhouse. Subsequently, it would become the Alexandra Hospital, which remained in business until 1978 when the new North Devon General hospital was opened.
An extract from from"Barnstaple Photographic Memories".

Barnstaple, the Athenaeum 1906

This picture faces the opposite direction to the previous one. The cabman’s shelter seen in photographs 49616 & 64564 on pages 34 to 36 is still in place. On the left, The Golden Lion was a 17th century merchant’s house. Today it is called The Bank inn. This district was known locally as The Hearts of Oak.
An extract from from"Barnstaple Photographic Memories".

Barnstaple, River Taw and Bridge 1935

By the time this picture was taken, the trees had gown to an enormous size and needed surgery. The river still pro- vided scope for pleasure boating and Shapland & Petter’s factory had grown to its full size. Today, boating is but a memory.
An extract from from"Barnstaple Photographic Memories".

Barnstaple, the River 1919

All is tranquil a couple of miles up-river of Barnstaple. The L&SW railway follows the river almost from the water- shed at Copplestone near Crediton, 30 miles away. The houses on the left are at Bishops Tawton; the riverside walk is still available for those who seek peace and solitude.
An extract from from"Barnstaple Photographic Memories".

Tawstock, Church 1890

This remarkable church, St Peter’s, is hidden in the Taw valley a couple of miles from Barnstaple. Cruciform in plan, it is early 14th-century (one of only seven remaining in Devon) and contains the finest collection of monuments in the county.
An extract from from"Barnstaple Photographic Memories".