Heckington, Lincolnshire
Heckington photos
Displaying 1 of 16 old photos of Heckington. View all Heckington photos
Heckington maps
Historic maps of Heckington and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Heckington maps
Heckington books
Displaying 3 of 6 books about Heckington and the local area. View all Heckington books
2 Heckington photos appear in 2 Frith book titles. You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Heckington
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Lincolnshire memories
My father was John Henry Williamson known as Harry. He lived with his father John William Williamson and mother Ada Florence nee Rylatt. My mother Florence Thorpe Catton was from Yorkshire and met Dad at Metheringham Feast.
The family lived in Burton Pedwardine at the time of my parents marriage in 1933 and Harry and Florence went to live with... [more]
Shared on 24 August 2008
i have fond memories of sleaford staying with my grand parents on st giles avenue , going to the wreck to play going swimming and best of all going to the market to see all the live stock .My dad would tell is all what he got up too as a child where he lived as a boy,jubilee road i think... [more]
Shared on 16 December 2007
This is a very significant picture to me although taken a good many years after we left high street for Mill Lane. My sister, Hilda and I were both born in one of the houses just beyond the white building, in our time that was the bakery, run by a Mr Wilson and family. (Hilda was born in 1918 and I... [more]
Shared on 13 July 2006
The Old Vicarage Cottage in Church Street is now home to the Parish Office and is a local access point for North Kesteven District Council. There is a good display of village photos, the building itself is about 350 years old, and is of interest as it is a rare example of the mud and stud buildings found in the village... [more]
Shared on 28 May 2009
This was where I started training as an RAF fighter pilot in 1951.
I firstly did my "Square Bashing" then was promoted to Acting Pilot Officer and made my first flight in a Tiger Moth flying over Lincoln. Then it was off to AFTS Ansty to train on Chipmunks.
Happy days!
Shared on 14 October 2008
My grandparents, Charles Herbert and Maud Mary Epton, lived at 3 (later 11) Council Houses, Brothertoft, and my childhood holidays were always spent here. My dad was born in that house, as was his brother, and my grandparents must have lived there nigh on 50 years, and both of them, along with several other relatives, are buried in Brothertoft churchyard. Dad,... [more]
Shared on 24 August 2009
I was born at Church Corner, Langrick, in one of a pair of tied cottages. My godparents lived next door. My mother was Joyce May Cargill, and she was living with her parents, Eva Kate and George Herbert White at the time of my birth. my father was Joseph William Cargill. He was in the Army, fighting in the second World... [more]
Shared on 26 March 2008
Please contact me on 07956522484 if you want any memories.
Shared on 01 June 2008
Extracts From Heckington & Lincolnshire books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Heckington, inspired by Frith photos.
Five miles east of Sleaford, Heckington is a village widely known for its superb 14th-century Decorated Gothic parish church with its 185 foot high spire, rich carvings and sinuous window tracery. Here we look along the High Street, where most of the houses and cottages survive on the left but only No 62, then an antique shop, on the right. The... [more]
Read more and see photos from this book.
Lincolnshire Photographic Memories
Five miles east of Sleaford, Heckington is a village widely known for its superb 14th-century Decorated Gothic parish church with its 185 foot high spire, rich carvings and sinuous window tracery. Here we look along the High Street, where most of the houses and cottages survive on the left but only No 62, then an antique shop, on the right. The... [more]
Read more and see photos from this book.
This is the only eight-sailed mill England, and has just (2004) had its ogee cap and sails repaired and reinstated. When working it is probably the most beautiful windmill in England. Built in 1830, but with only five sails, it was damaged by a storm in 1890. When it was repaired in 1892, the number of sails was increased to eight.... [more]
Read more and see photos from this book.
