Great Hampden, Buckinghamshire
Great Hampden maps
Historic maps of Great Hampden and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Great Hampden maps
Great Hampden photos
We have no photos of Great Hampden, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Prestwood, Speen, Great Missenden, Whiteleaf, Monks Risborough, Princes Risborough, Hughenden Valley, Naphill, Great KimbleGreat Hampden books
Displaying 3 of 3 books about Great Hampden and the local area. View all Great Hampden books
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Great Hampden
Displaying a selection of personal
memories of Great Hampden
.
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or of a photo of Great Hampden.
My parents were married at Great Hampden church in July 1929, they were Neater Ruth Groom of Prestwood, and Harold Aubrey Hall of Beenham in Berkshire. January 4th 1956 Barbara Hall, their only child, was married to Reginald Frank Ridgley, also of Prestwood. My mother died in April 1994, the wild cherry blossom and bluebells were adorning the Glade as we... [more]
Shared on 14 May 2009
Buckinghamshire memories
At the age of 16 I remember picking cherries on the trees (still existing in the photo and just shown to the left of the picture) while being too embarrassed/shy to acknowledge the presence of my first "girlfriend", Valery, on her bike below.
The Chequers was my fathers local from the mid twenties until the mid eighties. He hardly missed an... [more]
Shared on 24 December 2006
William Russell Wilson Bligh came to Australia and was living with his Uncle Sir Maurice O'Connell at Tarmons in Sydney in 1845. I have a copy of a letter written that expresses her concerns about her 18year old son and the way he is neglecting his family duty by not paying his uncle his due from his newly earned wages. He... [more]
Shared on 01 March 2007
I was born in Princes Risborough and fondly remember as a young boy going into the shop with the bay window (shown on the right of your picture) to buy sweets and giggle at the young girls. The shop was known locally as 'Blue Kettle Jacks' although it was properly known, I think, as The Old Blue Kettle.
Shared on 03 July 2007
On Sept 2 1877 William Frederick Beels married Emily Arkell in the Parish Church. William Frederick Beels' son was Frederick John Beels. His son was Frederick James Beels. Frederick James lived in Risboro with his grandparents and he remembers having to go to the next town by train to get groceries. He had to go by himself because his mother looked... [more]
Shared on 05 August 2006
We came to live in Downley Road in 1987 at The Barn which was in a bit of a state in those days. Wife, daughter, me and three cats. The very first memory I have is of our first weekend here when we thought we would quickly nip out to the back of the common to get our bearings for half... [more]
Shared on 24 December 2008
I recall a huge thermometer erected on the clock tower, it was graduated in pounds sterling with a picture of a Spitfie at the top> We children, and of course the rest of the Wendover community subscribed as much as we could as often as we could in order to puchase our very own Spitfire, as Wendover's contribution to the war... [more]
Shared on 21 July 2008
The most interesting gents barbers in the world
Probably just behind the photographer was an old fashioned mens barber shop. All the old men would go there for a haircut and mums would take their sons too. What the mums never knew is that when you sat in the alcove to have your hair washed there were numerous naughty pictures that could only be seen from in there. I... [more]
Shared on 07 October 2007
Extracts From Great Hampden & Buckinghamshire books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Great Hampden, inspired by Frith photos.
Amersham, Chesham And Rickmansworth Photographic Memories
This view, also taken from an upstairs window of the Griffin, looks into Broadway, much changed in the 1930s and 1940s. Until 1939 the buildings on the right faced Church Alley and the backs of ranges of cottages a few feet away, demolished in that year. Originally medieval and Tudor encroachments onto the old market place, these cottages hid the east view of the 1682 Market House. To the right, further cottages went in 1949 to... [more]
Read more and see photos from this book.
Amersham, Chesham And Rickmansworth Photographic Memories
Looking beyond the medieval parish church the building on the hill behind is the Georgian rectory built in the 1730s by the Rev Benjamin Robertshaw, overlooking the town and away from its bustle and smells. Very much the rectory of a prosperous country gentleman and clearly not that of a worker priest! The church has many fine monuments, mostly to the Drake family of Shardeloes, while to its right are the former Weller's Brewery buildings, now... [more]
Read more and see photos from this book.
Amersham, Chesham And Rickmansworth Photographic Memories
Looking west past the Memorial Gardens, the white building on the far hill, just to the left of the church tower, is Shardeloes, the Georgian mansion of the lords of the manor. Designed in the 1760s by the splendidly-named architect Stiff Leadbetter for William Drake, it replaced a 1630s house and was completed and decorated by Robert Adam. The Georgian stables and service buildings, designed by Francis Smith of Warwick and added to the... [more]
Read more and see photos from this book.
