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Hinchley Wood, Surrey

Hinchley Wood photos

Displaying 1 of 7 old photos of Hinchley Wood.   View all Hinchley Wood photos

7
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Hinchley Wood maps

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

Hinchley Wood map

Historic map of Hinchley Wood

Surrey map

Illustrated Victorian map of Surrey

Hinchley Wood map

Historic Map of any Hinchley Wood postcode

Hinchley Wood maps
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Hinchley Wood books

Displaying 3 of 10 books about Hinchley Wood and the local area.   View all Hinchley Wood books

Surrey County Memories
Paperback
rrp £15  £12

Villages of Surrey Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £14  £11.20

Camberley Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £13  £10.40

Hinchley Wood books
View all 10 Hinchley Wood and Surrey books

Memories of Hinchley Wood

Hinchley Wood memories
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Displaying a selection of personal memories of Hinchley Wood .
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Lawrence and Peggy Berg

My uncle Lawrence married Peggy Smurthwaite in about 1935 and took over the Hinchley Wood Hotel. It was already well-known to him and his brother, Ellis, because he was a partner in the building firm E & L Berg which had developed an estate over the other side of the Kingston Bypass. Though he knew little or nothing of the licenced... [more]

Shared on 06 April 2008 by Ellis Berg.

Surrey memories

My life on Weston Green

I was born in Weston Green, my parents having lived at Maisonette, Weston Green. My grandfather Charles Dobson was the local baker and lived on the green in the house on its own called The Lodge which was where the cricket was played. I used to watch it from my grandmother's back yard. She had ducks and hens and used to... [more]

Shared on 09 August 2009 by Kathleen Kelly.

Old Bakery - High Street

I'd be interested to know more about the Old Bakery on the High Street - I believe my great-grandfather, Arthur Brown, worked there at some point. The Brown family lived at 5 Rose Cottages, Station Road and also at 6 Foley Cottages, High Street (from at least the 1940s to 1961). I've found Rose Cottages, but I'm still trying to locate... [more]

Shared on 31 March 2009 by Kate Spurrier.

Molesey Pictures

My nan was the usherette at Molesey Picturehouse.She then became manager and stayed there until it was knocked down. This was next to Roberts radio. Does anybody remember her?

Shared on 12 April 2008 by Terry Cracknell.

helper

During the war my uncle was in the army with a man called Bert Sprake.  When they got out of the army Bert opened a butchers shop in the parade almost opposite Plough Road.  I used to go into his shop and help him make the sausages.  I never got paid for it but it was great fun. I lived in... [more]

Shared on 28 February 2007 by Jackie Ferry.

Molesey road

Not many cars about, not like now.  What a wonderful happy place to live where everyone said 'Good morning', unlike now where everybody is too busy with life to take time out and smile.  All we do is moan about this and that, smile it will make a difference to everyone. Bring good old Hersham back to being a fun place... [more]

Shared on 29 January 2007 by Terry Cracknell.

Sheath Lane and Goldrings Road

My great-grandfather bought Heathway in Sheath Lane in 1925. We lived there from 1945 to 1953 when my father built Winterbourne in Goldrings Road on Crown Land with a 99-year lease. I went to Oxshott Primary School and St Andrews Sunday School in the old village hall. I can remember the milkman and the rag-and-bone man driving horse-drawn carts... [more]

Shared on 30 November 2008

Conliston

Does anyone know of a house called Conliston in Oxshott.  Built in the 1930s, it  was "one mile from Oxshott Station and Leatherhead Golf Course.  Standing on the brow of a hill, facing full south".  This house was built by my aunt and her husband and sold in the early 1940s for £3,000.  The property was said to be held on... [more]

Shared on 10 November 2008

Extracts From Hinchley Wood & Surrey books

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

Epsom - A History & Celebration

In the last generation, the past of Epsom has been studied as never before, thanks to a team of outstanding historians. It has been a privilege to work with these people, and I regret that many of them are now part of the past they used to chronicle. I should like to pay tribute to the memory of Hans Lehmann, Maurice Exwood, John Furniss,... [more]

This is an extract from Epsom - A History & Celebration.
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Epsom - A History & Celebration

The first British film shot in Technicolor, 'Wings of the Morning' (1937), had a climactic Derby scene complete with Gypsy Queen. Tom Walls made 'Derby Day' in 1952, and when 'Esther Waters' was filmed in 1947 the downs were populated by tin people, who were cheaper by the day than crowd extras. More recently, the Queen's Stand has been in demand as a film... [more]

This is an extract from Epsom - A History & Celebration.
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Epsom - A History & Celebration

The library is housed on the first floor of the new centre, leaving the ground floor for retailers. A tall, marble-paved concourse runs behind a sheer glass wall that looks out onto the entrance square. This houses a bronze sculpture by Judy Boyt, 'Evocation of Speed', commissioned by the council in 2001 after a fundraising campaign that called on everyone from local residents to the Queen. It is a portrait... [more]

This is an extract from Epsom - A History & Celebration.
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