Iwerne Minster, Dorset
Iwerne Minster photos
Displaying 1 of 13 old photos of Iwerne Minster. View all Iwerne Minster photos
Iwerne Minster maps
Historic maps of Iwerne Minster and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Iwerne Minster maps
Iwerne Minster books
Displaying 3 of 14 books about Iwerne Minster and the local area. View all Iwerne Minster books
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Iwerne Minster
Displaying a selection of personal
memories of Iwerne Minster
.
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A Boarding School second to none
What a dump Iwerne Minster was to a school boy of the 60's sent from London to that boarding school in the middle of nowhere. The locals spoke in a strange unintelligible dialect, the air was sometime thick with the stink of manure, and you had to be 14 to buy beer from the off-licence at Tarrant Hinton! Now, 50+ years... [more]
Shared on 21 May 2008
Dorset memories
My great aunt Emilly Still lived in the bungalow in the background and we as children spent many happy summer holidays in Fontmell Magna. She and Tom (who I never knew) are buried in the church graveyard.
I remember travelling from our home in Kent to Fontmell in the winter of 1963 during the worst snow storms in living memory... [more]
Shared on 24 September 2006
I lived and worked at the manor from Sept 1986 to around May 1988, if anyone remembers me and wants to get in touch please email. j.goodwin007@hotmail.co.uk
Shared on 11 November 2009
Evacuation to Hanford House in war time
My sister and I came to Hanford House with the Wimbledon High School at the beginning of the war. After a year the school returned and the owner of the house, Mrs. Lister, collected a small group of teachers and offered to keep on any children whose parents did not want their children in London. We stayed two further... [more]
Shared on 23 April 2008
I remember these fields before any building was done in this part of the village.
The fields were owned by Mr Fred Bradley and Mr Harry Watts. I can remember going with Mr Watts to see if any cows had calved in the night. At the top of the field there was a large pond that in spring would be full... [more]
Shared on 22 February 2008
This photo brings back all sorts of memories! The house nearest the camara was the home of Mr Cottle the village harness maker, the double doors next to it led to the butchers yard, in those days they used to kill the animals behind the shop. The butcher was Mr Turner. He was followed by Mr Dyer whose son had the... [more]
Shared on 22 February 2008
Hambledon Hill played a great part in the first 15 years of my life as it did for most children of the village.
My very first memory is the huge bonfire built on top of the hill to mark the end of WW2, both my Father (Guy Moon) and George Diffy from the Post Office found some fireworks, this was the... [more]
Shared on 22 February 2008
HANFORD HOUSE
In the early years of the war, I taught at the school which was part of Hanford House. The rest of the house was occupied by a family I remember as the Listers (Colonel and Mrs.). My son-in-law, however, thinks it might have been Captain and Mrs. Sandys, the parents of Duncan Sandys. Mr. Sandys was, of... [more]
Shared on 02 February 2008
Extracts From Iwerne Minster & Dorset books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Iwerne Minster, inspired by Frith photos.
Wimborne Photographic Memories
The bank on the corner has become the Midland Bank, while across The Square the familiar names of Boots the Chemists and Foyle's Library appear on shop signs. Between them the draper Albert Hyland features a range of blouses and underwear in his window display. The centre of The Square has become a car park.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Wimborne Photographic Memories
Less than 20 years have passed since No 52472 was taken, but motor vehicles in the High Street and The Square now outnumber horse-drawn ones by nine to one. Note also that Buddens tailors shop on the corner of The Square has been demolished and replaced by the London Joint City Bank, established in 1836.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Wimborne Photographic Memories
The design of the Number 24 Bournemouth bus and the Morris Minor van opposite it take us firmly into the post-war years. On the far left, two of the three shops in this corner of The Square are now occupied by chemists, as one of them is today. The car park indicated at the corner of Mill Lane (left) was on the site now occupied by Safeways.
Read more and see photos from this book.
