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Chalford, Gloucestershire

Chalford photos

Displaying 1 of 18 old photos of Chalford.   View all Chalford photos

18
View all 18 photos of Chalford

Chalford maps

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

Chalford map

Historic map of Chalford

Gloucestershire map

Illustrated Victorian map of Gloucestershire

Chalford map

Historic Map of any Chalford postcode

Chalford maps
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Chalford books

Displaying 3 of 9 books about Chalford and the local area.   View all Chalford books

Gloucestershire Living Memories
Paperback
rrp £14  £11.20

Cotswold Villages Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £14  £11.20

Cotswolds Revisited Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £14  £11.20

Chalford books
View all 9 Chalford and Gloucestershire books

Memories of Chalford

Chalford memories
Read and share Chalford memories

Displaying a selection of personal memories of Chalford .
Add your memory of Chalford or of a photo of Chalford.

 

My Grandmother

My Grandmother was born in The Round House, Chalford in 1901.

Shared on 16 October 2008 by Joanna Smart.

Gloucestershire memories

Early Life in Chalford

I was born in Chalford at "The Little House" in Chalford Hill in 1932 and lived there until March 1940. I was the youngest of six children who all lived in the cottage and have very lovely memories of both the cottage and the local school which I attended. My Mother was a local girl who was a clerk in the... [more]

Shared on 14 December 2007 by Dinah Milgate.

Caravan Holiday with Mum

We stayed in a small caravan on Ridings Farm, owned then by Mr & Mrs Rand. We travelled by coach from Gosport, Hampshire. Catherine Hackett, my mother,adopted me when I was less than a year old, she was widowed and had 4 children of her own and as you can guess she was very special. Gosport is a naval... [more]

Shared on 09 September 2007 by Stella Flux.

THE WAR YARS 1939 1945

Hi I am Derek Hyde.  I with my sister arrived in Eastcombe late afternoon on the day war was declared, Sept 3d 1939.  We had been evacuated from Birmingam, we were to live with our grandparents for the duration of the war, we were the lucky ones to be with them, many others who came later did not know who they... [more]

Shared on 18 June 2008 by Derek Hyde.

The Potters' Cottage on the hilltop

I knew Fred Potter and his family in the early 1960s - Fred and I dated for a while. Many times we got off the bus on the main road (I lived in Nailsworth), often straight from school - he at Marling, me at High School. We'd then walk past the lake and up that hill - seemed no distance in... [more]

Shared on 23 August 2009 by Carla Radok.

Snow 1963

Having moved into Walls Quarry with my husband in 1961, I too remember the snow. It started to fall on Boxing Day 1962. We had a job to get home from Gloucester by car during theafternoon.
By March '63 it was still thick and frozen hard. The postmen had difficulty doing hillside deliveries out from Brimscombe Post Office. Three of... [more]

Shared on 30 May 2008 by Pauline Hill.

The Port Inn, Brimscombe

I first knew Brimscombe in the 1950s. I was brought up between Toadsmoor and Middle Lypiatt. In this starkly isolated location, it took a devoted beer drinker to travel through the darkness to the nearest pub. My Dad was of such a breed, and every evening he would go to the Bottle and Jug of the Port Inn in Brimscombe, more... [more]

Shared on 27 November 2007 by Fred Potter.

Ice skating on the port

In the very cold winter of 1963 the canal port (known as the polly basin) froze over we were able to go iceskating , Brimscombe Hill had deep snow drifts and was shutdown but we still got the papers delivered !!! I was a paper boy at the time aged 11 yrs

Shared on 01 July 2006 by Stuart Baker.

Extracts From Chalford & Gloucestershire books

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

Gloucestershire Photographic Memories

In this panoramic view of the Golden Valley, the mill chimneys are visible in the background; the workers' cottages are on the lower slopes of the hill, and the canal winds its way along the valley bottom.

This is an extract from Gloucestershire Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Stroud Photographic Memories

The viaduct on the left carries the railway as it descends from Sapperton Tunnel. Part of Chalford Baptist Tabernacle is on the right. In the distance is Rack Hill, which acquired its name from the racks on which cloth was pegged out to dry.

This is an extract from Stroud Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Cotswolds Pocket Album

The mechanisation of the traditional cloth industry created the Chalford we see today. But other nearby Cotswold villages suffered as traditional methods were abandoned, making them unable to compete with newer technology. This may be why so many neighbouring villages appear to be frozen in time—there was little need and no money to construct new buildings.

This is an extract from Cotswolds Pocket Album.
Read more and see photos from this book.

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