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Greenodd, Cumbria

Greenodd photos

Displaying 1 of 5 old photos of Greenodd.   View all Greenodd photos

5
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Greenodd maps

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

Greenodd map

Historic map of Greenodd

Cumbria map

Illustrated Victorian map of Cumbria

Greenodd map

Historic Map of any Greenodd postcode

Greenodd maps
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Greenodd books

Displaying 3 of 25 books about Greenodd and the local area.   View all Greenodd books

A Taste of Cumbria and the Lake District
Paperback
rrp £14  £11.20

Cumbria Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £14  £11.20

Grange-over-Sands Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £13  £10.40

Greenodd books
View all 25 Greenodd and Cumbria books

Memories of Greenodd

Greenodd memories
Read and share Greenodd memories

Displaying a selection of personal memories of Greenodd .
Add your memory of Greenodd or of a photo of Greenodd.

 

Family connections.

The gentleman with the scythe over his shoulder was my grandfather. His name was Joseph Jackson, born in 1849 at Bootle in Cumberland. He spent most of his life as a tenant farmer, first at Canleton Farm near Egremont also in Cumberland. He then moved to Lane Ends Farm at Haverthwaite in what was then Lancashire owing to... [more]

Shared on 06 April 2006 by Mr J Jackson.

Cumbria memories

Grandmother lived in Penny Bridge manor

My grandmother Sarah Hewitt was supposed to have lived in Penny Bridge manor and had a sister, I think, who drowned crossing the river - before the bridge was put in, maybe? - but I cannot find any information on her or her family. I would really appreciate any information.
What a beautiful place!!

Shared on 23 May 2009 by Sarah Coleman.

My mothers was evacuated to Penny Bridge during WW2

My mother Iris Woods was evacuated to Penny Bridge during WW2. She first stayed at Penny Bridge House with the Stanley sisters - Franny & Alice? She then was moved to Mrytle Cottage to live with Fred & Ellen Stanley.

She has very fond and happy memories of her time there. I'm trying to trace some information... [more]

Shared on 01 December 2008 by Rebecca Woods.

Hodgson/Braithwaite family

I do not have a memory exactly but have found out that my Grandma Braithwaite was born in Spark Bridge and a lot of her family of Hodgsons also lived there.  Her father James Braithwaite was a blacksmith and a lot of the family of Hodgsons worked in the Bobbin Mill that used to be there.  I just wish I could... [more]

Shared on 19 September 2008

Red Lion Inn

My father ran this pub around 1952 - 53 when I was a small child. It was taken over by the Walkers who were running it when this photo was taken. Bill Livsey (spelling?) owned the farm. We still have an original Frith postcard of this scene. In 1954 we left the UK and I have lived overseas ever since. I... [more]

Shared on 01 April 2009

The Whitewater Hotel at Backbarrow, near Newby Bridge


I stayed in Backbarrow for several days at the Whitewater Hotel which has been converted from a former mill building by the river. The lobby of this lovely "spa hotel" has display cabinets of memorabilia from its industrial heyday in the last century which was interesting and I recommend a visit.

My wife Elizabeth and I used this... [more]

Shared on 18 April 2008 by John Howard Norfolk.

Staveley village

I would like to share with your readers that my father Alban Crossley was born in Staveley and his mother Ethel Crossley (nee Bateman) worked in the bobbin mill in Staveley. Unfortunately my grandfather Michael Crossley died as a result of a motorbike accident. My father died in 1983 age 59years old.
We lived in Staveley in... [more]

Shared on 30 June 2008 by Ann Brennan.

John Wilson

My grandfather worked as wheelwright for Thomas Wren, ajoining the Swan Hotel. Can any relitive of Thomas Wren please give me any more information? His name was John Hartley Wilson of Lakeside.
My E Mail is johnwilson45@tiscali.co.uk THANK YOU
Ken Wilson

Shared on 21 April 2008 by John Wilson.

Extracts From Greenodd & Cumbria books

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

Cumbria Photographic Memories

This railway viaduct crossed the peaceful estuary of the River Leven. It was demolished in the 1970s to make way for the A590, which bypassed the village of Greenodd.

This is an extract from Cumbria Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Furness and Cartmel Peninsulas Photographic Memories

Trains from Ulverston to Lakeside no longer cross the viaduct spanning the channel of the River Leven – it has gone to make way for A590 improvements. A windmill (right) towers above what appears to be two stacks of brushwood. Greenodd was a port under the control of Lancaster until the mid 1800s, exporting gunpowder, copper ore, limestone burnt in local kilns, and other goods.... [more]

Lake District Photographic Memories

Greenodd stands on the Leven Estuary where the River Leven from Windermere and the River Crake from Coniston Water flow into Morecambe Bay and the Irish Sea. The line of the Furness Railway, built in 1857, can be seen crossing the bay on the embankment to the right.

This is an extract from Lake District Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

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