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Linwood

Linwood photos (3 available)

Old photo of Linwood

Linwood maps (2 available)

Old map of Linwood

Linwood books (13 available)

Linwood memories

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You can also read memories of nearby places in Hampshire below.

Hampshire memories

Coxstone Lane.

Ringwood, Coxstone Lane 1913

I was born in a bungalow on the corner of Coxstone Lane in 1962 and my nanny lived in a thatched cottage called Brookside in Coxstone Lane. I had some very dear friends on that lane, I would love to know what happened to them all.
A memory of Ringwood contributed by san blake

Ringwood High Street

Ringwood, Town Centre c1960

I rember walking up to the High Street as a small child, there was a shop, I think it was a hardware or ironmongers, at Christmas time the shop was always lit with lovely fairy lights. There was also a supermarket called Pricerights and another shop called Coxs and Hicks which sold a full range of clothes and soft furnishings, wool, material, all that kind of stuff.
A memory of Ringwood contributed by san blake

Walking 3 miles to school

My mum Barbara Wiltshire [nee Pritchard] was brouhgt up here with her 11 brothers and sisters. She is always reminding us that she had to walk 3 miles to school and one of her brothers used to bunk off and hide in the woods until it was time to come home, sadly she has dementia now, which took hold of many of her brothers and sisters also, but she still vaguely remembers when she sees the name and photos of Burley. It's so sad to see her memory gradually fading though, if anyone has any photos we would be grateful.
Lyn Cook
A memory of Burley contributed by lyn cook

memorys

Minstead, the Church 1955

Came to Minstead for a weeks break to help my wife rest and recover from breast cancer.
Stayed in a very nice thatched cottage.
We live in a village in Saddleworth that is beautiful, but Minstead the village the people and most of all the church just made it so nice.
Just to sit in the garden of the Minstead cottage at night and look at the stars in the calm night was so nice.
Although it can't cure my beautiful wife's dreadful cancer, it did help just to walk down tree and flower covered lanes and be in such a peaceful place.
My wife has always had horses but had to let them go due to her illness so to ...read more here
A memory of Minstead contributed by philip howard

Extracts From Linwood & Hampshire books

Linwood, the Village c1965

Linwood is situated high on the heathlands of the western edge of the New Forest, overlooking the broad valley of the Avon. It is one of the most isolated villages in the locality; its lonely open road winds across the heart of King William’s old hunting territory.
An extract from from"New Forest Photographic Memories".

Romsey, Mainstone 1904

This famous firm was developed from a combination of various Romsey breweries in the latter part of the 19th century, when rail transport made it possible to carry beer over considerable distances. Strong’s became one of the main employers in the town for about a hundred years, but the need for modernisation caused brewing to cease in 1981; the operation, by that time part of Whitbread Wessex, was finally closed in 1990. Part of the site has been cleared, but the main buildings, some converted to offices, remain — the heritage of late 19th-century and early 20th-century builders.
An extract from from"Romsey Town and City Memories".

Romsey, Sadler's Mill c1955

With nine mill sites in the town, many enterprises used water to power the machinery necessary for their businesses — corn, paper, and cloth-fulling mills, saw mills, and tanneries. Most written material about Romsey’s mills seems to relate to problems in obtaining that most important item — water. Romsey’s mills depended on the river Test and its branches for their power. Competition was keen, and resulted in many legal disputes arising from millers upstream diverting the water from those downstream. There was a series of disputes in Tudor times at Sadler’s Mill: its owner suffered from the work of millers upstream, who ‘with divers and sondrie lewde and desperate persons ... erected a pilinge over athwart the mayne Channel of the Ryver and thereby stopped turned and diverted the said Mayne River of Terste out of his aunciente and common Course ...’ Troubles of this kind continued through the following centuries, providing the legal profession with a steady source of income. As late as the early 20th century, wooden stakes were still being placed incorrectly to control the water flow. At that time, photographic evidence was offered in court; an unfortunate river keeper was shown standing in the faulty area to demonstrate the depths.
An extract from from"Romsey Town and City Memories".

Chandlers Ford, Randall Road c1965

All these roads are similar. The rough roads have all been paved. Almost all the houses are detached, and often individually designed. The Local Area Committee of the Borough Council is doing its best to maintain the special ambiance of the district. However, it is a sad fact that developers are begin- ning to nibble at any open spaces for the building of flats. There is a Tree Preservation Order covering this area, which we may hope will prevent the destruction of most of the trees.
An extract from from"Around Eastleigh including Chandler's Ford, Bishopstoke and Botley Living Memories".

This road goes to Winchester. To the centre right we can just see the open- ing of Mortimer Lane, which leads to Bishops Waltham and to Marwell Zoo.
An extract from from"Around Eastleigh including Chandler's Ford, Bishopstoke and Botley Living Memories".