Lavendon, Buckinghamshire
Lavendon photos
Displaying 1 of 7 old photos of Lavendon. View all Lavendon photos
Lavendon maps
Historic maps of Lavendon and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Lavendon maps
Lavendon books
Displaying 3 of 3 books about Lavendon and the local area. View all Lavendon books
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Lavendon
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Buckinghamshire memories
The lad leaning on the wall was John Cook, whose father was a policeman in NP, the guy to the left in the dark suite is me and the lad sitting on the pillar (to the right) was David Ashworth son of Major Ashworth who lived in Silver Street.
Shared on 07 August 2008
I had heard of The Great Linford and can trace genealogy back to the one subjects that lived on the Great Linford although it is not named after any of my ancestors.
In 2000, I had the opportunity to vist London and rented a car and drove out to Milton Keynes and the Great Linford just to see what it... [more]
Shared on 15 June 2006
Where the name Heelands orginated
I was told a tale by Mrs Lester of Bradwell Village that one day the lord of Bradwell Manor had visitors from Scotland staying, and early one morning as they looked out of their bedroom window and looked across the fields towards Heelands they remarked how much the scenery reminded them of home and the Hi'glands, and this is how the... [more]
Shared on 26 September 2009
My dad used to have a stall in the Market Hall in Wolverton selling groceries. I remember going with him in the van on Fridays and on the way back we would call into to visit old family friends who lived in Cosgrove ' the slaymakers'. Not sure exactly where they lived but seem to think it was on a corner... [more]
Shared on 28 May 2009
Daneswood Convalescent Home 1958/9
I was a pre - Nursing student at Daneswood for two years. I hailed from Bolton, Lancashire and it was my first time away from home and town. I fell in love with Woburn Sands and enjoyed my time at Daneswood, to this day I have lovely memories of the place and friends made there.
I have lived in Canada... [more]
Shared on 24 October 2008
I was born in NW London. My first visit to Woburn Sands was about 1950 when my Uncle Ted and Aunt Ada moved here. They lived at the 'Dene' Aspley Hill. Aunt Ada did the housework for Mrs Russell the owner of the 'Dene' and my uncle drove a lorry for Marston Bricks. My school holidays were spent here cycling around... [more]
Shared on 19 September 2006
I was born at number 8 Woodbine Terrace; in attendance was nurse Brinklow the local midwife and Dr Gleeve. My parents were Jim and Vera Cusack.
Just after the begining of the war my mother, sister and grandparents moved to Fenny Stratford to be near my auntie Doris (mother's sister) and to... [more]
Shared on 09 September 2009
When I was about 4 or 5 I moved from Water Eaton to Fenny. We lived with my gran, Mrs Gibson, in Church Street. We - my two brothers and myself, used to go to the Salvation Army Sunday School, we were only few doors away, and felt grown up walking the few yards away. I used to play the tambourine... [more]
Shared on 22 June 2009
Extracts From Lavendon & Buckinghamshire books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Lavendon, inspired by Frith photos.
North Buckinghamshire Photographic Memories
The busy A428 Northampton to Bedford Road winds through the village from west to east, curving round the parish churchyard's rubblestone retaining walls. This is the furthest north part of Buckinghamshire, beyond the stone-built market town of Olney, and not far from the Northamptonshire border. West of the village, in the quiet valley of a stream, was a small abbey founded in 1154, and long-vanished. Lavendon's parish church was old even then,... [more]
Read more and see photos from this book.
North Buckinghamshire Photographic Memories
Looking across from within the churchyard is the post office, which occupies an 18th-century stone house. The steel windows replaced the original leaded casements in about 1960, and have themselves been replaced by timber windows ten years ago. That was when the building ceased to be a post office and became a private house.
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Milton Keynes - A History & Celebration
Jean Raiders recalled the impact the brick industry made on her relatives in the early 20th century: 'Employed as a bricklayer by several local builders, my grandfather, Frank Howard, worked on the re-building of the Swan, and the building of the Town Hall and Rhondda and Ropley Houses.
Read more and see photos from this book.
