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Fair Oak, Staffordshire

Fair Oak maps

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

Fair Oak map

Historic map of Fair Oak

Staffordshire map

Illustrated Victorian map of Staffordshire

Fair Oak map

Historic Map of any Fair Oak postcode

Fair Oak maps
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Fair Oak photos

We have no photos of Fair Oak, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Cheswardine, Ashley, Hales, Eccleshall, Old Springs

Fair Oak books

Displaying 2 of 2 books about Fair Oak and the local area.   View all Fair Oak books

Staffordshire Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £14  £11.20

Uttoxeter Living Memories
Paperback
rrp £13  £10.40

Fair Oak books
View all 2 Fair Oak and Staffordshire books

Memories of Fair Oak

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Staffordshire memories

Leawood Pitts, High Offley

My Great Great Grandfather was  a farmer and the owner of Leawood Pitts from around 1848 to 1892. His name was John Clemson and he farmed about 46 acres. He had a wife, Mary, and seven children. I have a photograph of the farmhouse taken sometime during that period, and also some historical information. I thought this might get the Memories... [more]

Shared on 27 January 2009 by Jennifer Nottingham.

My life there

I remember the days when I lived on a farm that was owned by Mark Carter from Eccleshall Castle. I had so much fun living in Eccleshall that I didn't want to move when the farm was sold. I had loads of friends and good memories, I remember when all the children were given a Silver Jubilee coin at school, the... [more]

Shared on 07 May 2008 by Caroline Owen.

Wonderful Times

My father moved to Cold Meece in 1960 to take up his job as a prison officer at the nearby Drake Hall open prison, and we stayed there for a couple of years before we moved to live at the prison itself.

At the time I was between 9 and 11 years old and, for a child of that age,... [more]

Shared on 17 August 2009 by John Grehan.

Wonderful Times Too

I read John Grehan's contribution with great interest. I too enjoyed the air raid shelters and LMS Station at Cold Meece, though four or five years later than his own expeditions. I too attended St Joseph's and the two boys in the taxi with John were my older brothers. By the time I went to "St Joe's", the taxi service... [more]

Shared on 13 October 2009 by Jim Jamieson.

The Boat

The Boat is the name of the Inn on the left of the picture. As children we used to walk across the top of bridge wall and, as a further dare, across the pipes which ran just below the parapet, above the water.
   Once, when I was serenely paddling the canoe back from Cowley Tunnel, a loaded barge came... [more]

Shared on 07 April 2007 by Penny Trueman.

Norbury Junction!

This is Norbury Junction, not far from but, definitely not Gnosall.
The boys in the woodwork class at school (Gnosall) built a canoe as a project which was afterwards stored in the old Mill on the opposite side of the canal to the Navigation Inn. (The Mill was the first in the area to be steam powered, I think). The canoe... [more]

Shared on 07 April 2007 by Penny Trueman.

Mason''s Lawn

We moved from the hamlet of Moreton/Bromstead to Gnosall, where my Dad worked, (based at the council wharf) in 1958, and Mason's lawn wasn't built then!  We used to have our bonfires on the site and, if 1963 was the year it snowed really heavily (and I believe it was) - we were still building snowmen and rolling massive snowballs there!... [more]

Shared on 07 April 2007 by Penny Trueman.

Growing Up

My sister Pat and I lived first in Sutherland Road then Monument Lane. We went to Granville Secondary Modern in Stone. I loved growing up in Tittensor as it was a lovely village, my best mate was Sandra Wagg. My maiden name was Powell. It would be nice to hear from anyone who lived there.

Shared on 27 May 2009 by Christine Lawrence.

Extracts From Fair Oak & Staffordshire books

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

Stafford - A History & Celebration

Its surroundings are pleasant without being spectacular: 90% of Staffordshire is rural, and nowhere in the town, not even in the very centre, is one ever far from the countryside. One thing to be said for Stafford (as far as anywhere can make such a claim in these unsettled times) is that it is a town without a darker side. It is not big enough to contain 'inner city areas',... [more]

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

Stafford - A History & Celebration

The town also has an association with Skarzysko/Kamienna in Poland. Like everywhere else, Stafford is changing. Until perhaps halfway through the last century the majority of people living in the town

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

Stafford - A History & Celebration

School pupils, reached No 3 in the USA charts in 1973 (No 10 in the UK) with its single 'Couldn't Get it Right.' Fran Henley, the lead singer of Travis, is also a Staffordian. In the 1980s and 1990s Bingley Hall, part of the County Showground on Weston Road, hosted several groups such as Black Sabbath and the Electric Light Orchestra. The showground still stages national events in areas as... [more]

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

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