The Francis Frith Collection.
You are here:

Hooton Roberts

Hooton Roberts maps

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

Hooton Roberts photos

We have no photos of Hooton Roberts, although we do have photos of these nearby places:

Swinton| Conisbrough| Rawmarsh| Bramley| Wickersley| Wath-Upon-Dearne| Bolton-Upon-Dearne| Greasbrough| Rotherham| Maltby| Whiston| Goldthorpe| Sprotbrough| Wadworth| Thurnscoe| Wentworth| Laughton En Le Morthen| Elsecar| Wombwell| Bentley

Hooton Roberts area books

Displaying 1 of 28 books about Hooton Roberts and the local area.   View all books for this area

Memories of Hooton Roberts

Hooton Roberts memories
Read and share Hooton Roberts memories

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

 

Tracing Ancestors Hooton Roberts

I am currently researching my family tree and wonder if anybody in Hooton Roberts might be related to me. My great-great-grandfather Joseph Simpson was born in Conisbrough 1839 and married a lass called Harriett (I don't know her maiden name). According to the Census she was born in Hooton Roberts in 1840. She and Joseph married and lived in Hooton Roberts from about 1863 to about 1883. The following children were all born in Hooton Roberts. Kate 1863, Alfred 1868, Simeon 1872, Charlotte 1875, Joseph 1878, Archibald 1883. A daughter Elizabeth was born in Conisbrough 1861. The 1891 Census reveals them to be all living at Accrington.  Except for my great-grandfather Simeon who later moved to Read, Lancs. I have no idea what became of the others. I was wondering if any of them moved back to Hooton Roberts and if anyone has any memory of this. I hope to visit the UK soon and would like to visit Hooton Roberts. Apparently Joseph and his first son Alfred were the... Read more

Hooton Roberts

I was born a Willertt at 5 Kilnhurst Rd in 1940. I remember the noise of German fighters going to bomb Sheffield and many German or Italian prisoners marching from Kilnhurst to the camp at Ravenfield. They used to throw us tins containing sweets and we used these tins when playing hopscotch. We had no electricity in the house which is very different now.  I wonder whether the cellar still floods! We had gas downstairs and candles upstairs, no curtains and it was always very cold. The windows would be covered with thick ice in the morning. When electricity finally came to the village, we were too poor to pay the connection charge. We lived with my grandfather William Willert who used to look after the cricket ground before the war. My maternal grandparents lived in an old coaching inn at the bottom of Doncaster Rd on the left looking up the hill. There were many bottles in the cellar; the house was demolished to widen the road. Next door... Read more

EARL OF STRAFFORD OPENS 1984

It's nearly 25 years since the Earl of Strafford hotel opened in Hooton Roberts. I wrote an M.A. dissertation on Thomas Wentworth, the First Earl of Strafford after whom the pub is named, so I was naturally very interested.

I was shown around the building and was amazed to see runnels in the basement floor which were for the blood from beasts slaughtered on the premises in the old days. I also heard about Anne Kent who is supposed to haunt the place after an unhappy love affair long ago. I was so intrigued, I wrote a pamphlet about the hotel.

I often go jogging through Hooton Roberts and I have developed a real affection for the place, especially Holmes Lane which goes behind the church and comes out again on Kilnhurst Road. It is so tranquil down there, even though the traffic thunders by on the main road only yards away.

The church of Saint John the Baptist is also a fine... Read more

South Yorkshire memories

Nags Head Pub Glasshouse Lane Kilnhurst

I am researching my Great Grandmother Amy Jenkins and have information from her marriage lines that she was living at the Nags Head when she married George Thomas Roberts in 1896 but can find no further info on this no photos or anything, if you know of anyone who could assist me in this I would appreciate it . We believe from family word of mouth that Amy had been to South Africa and worked her passage back and she could have been the pianist at the pub.

A House Called Inglenook (Earl Fitzwilliams Property)

I was born at Inglenook in Kilnhurst September 1920. My parents were Ralph Atkin and Ethel Susanna Brader. My memories consist of my parents activities as related to me as a child. My grandfather David Brader was Swinton stationmaster for the Midland Rwy. I am told that David had some children by his first wife Alice and after Alice died he married my grandmother, Sarah who bore Mary,Arthur and my dad, Ralph. If any of these or their offspring are surviving please do post here.

Village Kid

I grew up in old Denaby with my 2 older brothers. My mum had lived there from birth and still does to this day. In those days it was a real village community, unfortunately this has disapeared over the years, it is now a place for people with too much cash, the spirit has left the place. I spent many happy hours up the wood or the playing field, football was the order of the day on Sunday afternoon. Acorn fights were the event of choice in the woods as well as games of hiddy (hide 'n seek).

Childhood in Old Denaby

I can remember most of what you are saying, I had some great times as a child living in Old Denaby. I wonder what happened to all the people in the years that have passed.

© Copyright 1998-2012 Frith Content Inc. All rights reserved.