East Hendred, Oxfordshire
East Hendred maps
Historic maps of East Hendred and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all East Hendred maps
East Hendred photos
We have no photos of East Hendred, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Harwell, Steventon, West Hagbourne, Drayton, East Hanney, Grove, Wantage, Sutton Courtenay, West Ilsley, Didcot, West Hanney, East HagbourneEast Hendred books
Displaying 2 of 6 books about East Hendred and the local area. View all East Hendred books
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of East Hendred
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Oxfordshire memories
I spent several summer school holidays in Didcot with my mate and grandad,
he lived in Newlands Avenue with my Uncle Bert. Grandad ran the bar in the army camp. He used to send me round to wake up the men first thing. The man in charge was a Sergeant Biggs. Mum worked in the post office where she met Dad, who was stationed at Harwell.
Grandad would come to Hertford by train and return to Didcot so I could spend
my 6 weeks with him. My uncle owned several cars, there was an XK 140 or E Type outside the house from time to time. Grandad's name was Mr A A Attwooll. Does any body remember him?
Regards,
T R A Johnson
01992 551708
tom@johnsonbutchers.co.uk
Thanks for letting me put this down.
Shared on 09 December 2008
My grandmother lived in Steventon with her own grandmother around 1880. She was Florence Prior and her own gran was Eliza Prior who by then was a widow and a laundress living in Timsbury Cottage. I have tried to find the cottage but the only place I have seen with a similar name is Timsbury Villa. I sometimes wonder if it is the same place. My own visit to Steventon was around 1986. I remember visiting St Michael's Church and having a picnic in the next field among all the cowslips and other wild flowers. It was beautiful. I walked around the churchyard and found many tombstones for the Prior family including one who was in the Grenadier Guards and was killed in the First World War. Intriguingly, I found a stone with an inscription remembering Stephen Prior who died 30 May 1864 aged 46. I am tempted to guess that this is my own great-great-grandfather who married Eliza the laundress. Who knows?
Shared on 12 January 2008
I was 8 when I moved to Steventon. We used to live in Didcot while I was a baby. I enjoyed Didcot and liked the town side of it. Also we moved here because my mum and dad wanted to live in the countryside while I was growing up to my teens. My mum is called Sharon Tappin and my dad is called Clive Tappin. So far we have been here for a year and I really like it here and also I am settled in to the school.
My name is Rebecca Tappin.
Shared on 08 June 2007
I went to Steventon as a 'Mother's Help' to an Italian family. I came from near Manchester. I had to clean, look after a baby and a toddler and help with cooking.
But I had never been away from home before and decided it wasn't for me. It was a lovely house on the Causeway which was a listed building. The family didn't own it. I remember the lady making me wash and iron all my bedding while my mum sat with me in the kitchen to take me home!
Shared on 02 June 2007
Extracts From East Hendred & Oxfordshire books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about East Hendred, inspired by Frith photos.
Abingdon Photographic Memories
Until the mid 19th century, Abingdon grew little beyond its Tudor limits, but in the 1860s an estate of villas around a public park was set out to the north of Ock Street. The park itself was presented by Christ's Hospital charity, who ran the almshouses. Little was developed until the later 1870s, but Albert Park heralded a new era of civic pride and prosperity. Albert Park lay at the estate's north end, with the largest villas along its north side to the right of this view, which was taken looking west towards the Albert Memorial.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Abingdon Photographic Memories
All Saints’ Parish Church was rebuilt in 1837 by William Fisher from Oxford, who kept the plain 13th-century west tower and reused several windows, doorways and arches. He was mainly a builder, but designed a few churches, including St Ebbe’s in Oxford (1814-17). Above the porch door is a niche with a modern statue of Jesus with two lambs.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Abingdon Photographic Memories
The last view in Marcham was taken from the parish church tower looking south-east towards Parkside, a large estate of 1950s former council houses. To the right behind the line of lime trees is the east arm of Church Street, which runs along the south side of the churchyard. To the left and out of view is Denman College, formerly Marcham Park, a late Georgian mansion. Now owned by the National Federation of Women’s Institutes and renamed after their founder, Lady Denman, it is a residential adult education college.
Read more and see photos from this book.



