Flitwick, Bedfordshire
Flitwick photos
Displaying 3 of 5 old photos of Flitwick. View all Flitwick photos
Flitwick maps
Historic maps of Flitwick and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Flitwick maps
Flitwick books
Displaying 2 of 7 books about Flitwick and the local area. View all Flitwick books
4 Flitwick photos appear in 2 Frith book titles. You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Flitwick
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Bedfordshire memories
My abiding memory of Ampthill is when I used to go to the Saturday pictures with my cousins and the fire engine would be called out. The only problem was the siren that called them out was the old wartime air-raid siren. What a noise !!! I lived in Maulden but often visited Ampthill. thanks for the memories. !!!
Shared on 26 November 2007
Browsing Ampthill, for the first time, I came across the above photo. On the left just above the logo is a shop blind that used to protect the meat in the window display from sunshine (when it appeared). That blind was the bain of my life in 1952/3/4 when I was a so called "butchers boy". It never ran correctly on it's tracks, and I caused many a car to swerve my long pole manipulations putting it up and down. Funny when I think about it. The bicycle outside (possibly me pictured) was used for deliveries. The carrier full of orders for Maulden and surrounds was a steering hazard particulary in the snow. One Saturday morning I came to grief down Maulden hill and spent an hour scraping dirt and stones from meat with my pen knife before going on my way. The complaints arrived back at Ampthill well before yours truly. Oh the humiliation and all for 2/6p a week. Humiliation was for being caught out, not for stony meat. On the positive side the grumpy woman that lived down I think it was called "Duck Lane" never ordered meat again.
As a retiree I live in a nice environment/climate in Tasmania. 15 years ago I passed through Ampthill on a visit and I believe the butchers shop was a launderette. That's progress for you!!!!
It has been great to reminice with the aid of the Ampthill web site. Keep it up.
I can see my old Ampthill address, 14 Flitwick Rd on Google Earth. How Ampthill has altered.
Anyway, Greetings from Tasmania, Paul Guyton.
Shared on 03 September 2007
The lady with the white coat and shopping basket on the right hand side of the photo is my grandmother - Clara Billington - and lovely to see her in print!
Shared on 21 April 2007
The shop next door to The Ampthill News was and still is Cheesman's the chemist and the shop next door to that was Underwood's an electrical appliance shop.
Shared on 11 May 2006
Extracts From Flitwick & Bedfordshire books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Flitwick, inspired by Frith photos.
Bedfordshire Photographic Memories
Flitwick is a village that has been the subject of substantial population growth during the 1980s and 90s, tripling its physical coverage with ease. The parish church of St Peter and St Paul has a 12th-century base, which was subject to the chancel being widened in the 13th century, and the bell tower being added in the 14th century.
Read more and see photos from this book.
These premises became a children’s annexe to Luton & District General Hospital. Jane Creasey went there to have a squinting eye corrected in the 1950s. It has also enjoyed time as an Exodus collective with various escapist amusements!
Read more and see photos from this book.
A few miles from Dunstable, through the Downs, and nowadays part of the commuter belt, Castle Hill road links the three ends of Totternhoe, Church, Middle and Lower. A pathway leads up to the castle mound which overlooks the surrounding countryside. Possibly originally a prehistoric fort, it is a motte and bailey earthwork. Totternhoe was the last Bedfordshire parish to be enclosed in 1891.
Read more and see photos from this book.




