Flackwell Heath
Flackwell Heath maps
Historic maps of Flackwell Heath and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Flackwell Heath maps
Flackwell Heath photos
We have no photos of Flackwell Heath, although we do have photos of these nearby places:
Wooburn Green| Bourne End| Wooburn Town| Little Marlow| Hedsor| Penn| Beaconsfield| High Wycombe| Tylers Green| Cookham| Cliveden| Marlow| Cookham Dean| Hazlemere| Bisham| Seer Green| Burnham| Coleshill| Farnham Common| Hughenden Valley| Taplow| West Wycombe| Naphill| Boyn Hill| Maidenhead| Farnham Royal| Little Missenden| Medmenham| Cippenham| Hurley
Flackwell Heath area books
Displaying 1 of 7 books about Flackwell Heath and the local area. View all books for this area
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Flackwell Heath
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Buckinghamshire memories
My Grandad's House
My grandparents lived in the cottage on the right of the photo. I was evacuated there at the begining of the Second World War. It was then called Rose Cottage. My father was also born in Wooburn Green. I can also remember my grandfather living next to the Red Lion pub.
Our First Home
My husband and I have many fond memories of Wooburn Green. We bought our first home, Millstream House, on Glory Mill Lane, right opposite the Wiggins Teape paper mill. Our first child, Clare, was also born in Buckinghamshire at Burnham Beeches. We only stayed 2 years but got to know our neighbour, Lucy, really well. She used to tell us all about her working days at the mill. I enjoyed exploring the area and pushing Clare around in her pram.
We left Wooburn Green in 1975 and have lived in the United States ever since, first in Cleveland, Ohio, and now in Lexington, Kentucky.
Two of my Uncles Memorailzed on Obelisk at Wooburn Green
My grandfather was GM of Glory Mill in the early 1900s. My father and his siblings were raised in a house located on the grounds. There were four brothers and all served in the British Army in WWI. The oldest (called Harry) died in 1917 near Theassalonica and is buried there. Joe was the next to youngest brother. (My father was the youngest.) He died at the battle of the Somme in 1916. No remains were found.
My wife and I visited Wooburn Green some years ago and and went to the local pub for lunch. We talked with the owner who knew the Personnel Manager of the company. She dug out pay records of 1905 that had my grandfather's pay of five pounds for that week. By that time all the customers of the pub were gathered round and all agreed that was good pay in those days.
My father visited the States after the war to learn what the US was doing in paper making. He... Read more
The Pheasant
Does anyone have any info about this pub? It appears in my family tree, and my family were living in it in 1911, they are shown on the census for that year, but I can't find any contemporary reference to it. Any info or old photos would be welcome.
Upper Bourne End
My brothers and I returned to Bourne End at the end of the war. We had been evacuated to Nottingham. We lived in a small house called "The Nest". It was the last house on the road. Lunnon's Farm backed on to all the houses and a cherry tree was just outside our back garden. On a Sunday we used to go to get Stones Ginger Beer as a treat after lunch.
Mr Taylor who lived a little way down the road, had the forge, and I loved watching him shoe the horses and see the flames belching from the fire.
We used to walk to the school in Bourne End.
Although our house was small, my mother let a Mrs Wackett and her son Terry come and stay with use as they had been bombed during the war.
My Father was a POW in Changi. He died in 1944
I remember there... Read more
My Mum
My mum worked at Jacksons mill in Furlong Road where she met my dad and they got married in 1955, I would be enternally grateful if any one out there has any pictures of the mill as I would love to know what it looked like back then.
When we Had A Shop
I was born in Little Marlow in 1947 and lived three doors away from the village shop, run by Miss Littlewood. I would go there and weigh the sultanas, currants etc., and put them into little blue bags.
My Mum (Phyllis Wright) waited at table when Queen Elizabeth 2nd came to visit Lord and Lady Ronaldshay at the manor house, and can also remember that when England won the World Cup in 1966 the coach with all the players parked outside our house, whilst the players went to the manor house. I would go to the Queens Head pub, with a jug for lemonade. Pub was run by Vic and Joan Woolmore, but before them it was run by Joan's Mum, but I can't remember her name. My little bit of England is Little Marlow, although it's changed so much now, I still love it.
