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Lilley, Bedfordshire

Lilley photos

Displaying 1 of 1 old photos of Lilley.   View all Lilley photos

Lilley, the Lilley Arms c1955 photo

Lilley, the Lilley Arms c1955

Lilley photos
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Lilley maps

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

Lilley map

Historic map of Lilley

Bedfordshire map

Illustrated Victorian map of Bedfordshire

Lilley map

Historic Map of any Lilley postcode

Lilley maps
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Lilley books

Displaying 2 of 8 books about Lilley and the local area.   View all Lilley books

On Sale! 70 off

Hitchin Town and City Memories
Paperback
rrp £12  £3.60

On Sale! 70 off

Hitchin Town and City Memories
Hardback
rrp £16  £4.80

On Sale! 70 off

Hemel Hempstead - A History & Celebration
Hardback
rrp £15.99  £4.80

Lilley books
View all 8 Lilley and Bedfordshire books

Memories of Lilley

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Add your memory of Lilley or of a photo of Lilley.

Bedfordshire memories

Cottages in Lower Road

My dad used to live in the end cottage up until the early 1950s (the one next to the car). Both my grandparents lived there until about 1965.
The cottage was very small, with no running water and an old earth closet toilet. The water had to be collected in pails from standpipes every day.
These were dotted around the village next to the older cottages that did not have any internal running water, and this was the norm right up untill the late 1960s, when a lot of the houses were modernised. From memory, the water appeared to be not charged or metered as during the summer holidays you always could get a free drink and play around by leaving the standpipes full on to create mini floods!
I also remember the council lorry arriving on Wednesday afternoons to visit various houses around the village to empty the contents of the toilets. I recall the smell, especially in the summer!
Kevan Peters


Shared on 18 December 2008 by Kevan Peters.

Colemans Road

When I was small my mother used to help out in the farm run by Mr Coleson, which was behind the photographer. His son Tommy still lives there I think.
I remember collecting eggs and Mr Coleson drinking milk that was still warm from the cows he had.
The  house at the bottom is now called the Old Queen's Head after its original use as a pub. I remember part of it being used for the doctors surgery, the doctor being either a Mr Probyn or a Dr Crill.

Shared on 18 December 2008 by Kevan Peters.

My Heritage

Personally I don't have a memory of the Sun Hotel, but my late mother told me once that she thought her father's family either owned or ran the hotel. Their name was Taylor and they came from Hitchen and the surrounding area.

Shared on 11 May 2009 by Margaret Cadger.

Halsey's Delicatessen

Our grandparents used to visit Halsey's weekly from Old Stevenage to buy their provisions. Now I with my sister visit regularly especially as we love the new owners' Kirsty and Damien's Tea Room. We take our children for 'tea' there and they think it's a real treat! Christmas simply wouldn't be Christmas without our Christmas Pudding Coffee, and Wild Boar and Black Seal Rum Pate!

Shared on 30 October 2008 by Sharon Dudley.

Extracts From Lilley & Bedfordshire books

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

North and East Hertfordshire Photographic Memories

The Lilley Arms is the oldest public house in the village and dates from around 1705. Originally called the Sugar Loaf, in 1852 its name was changed to the Sowerby Arms out of respect to the lord of the manor. During the Great War, it changed again to the Lilley Arms. For many years the adjacent building was occupied by the village blacksmith. Lilley was the home of Johan Kellerman, a famous alchemist who boasted that he could change mercury into gold. It is said that he lived in squalor in one room protected by sliding bolts and patent padlocks. Kellerman boasted that 'the world, sir, is in my hands and my power'. Eventually he was chased away and died in poverty in Paris.

Hitchin Town and City Memories

In 1901, Hermitage Road was a pleasant, open avenue. The building on the left in view 46642, left, is the Hermitage, home of Frederick Seebohm; very little of it still remains. Windmill Hill is just visible in the background.

This is an extract from Hitchin Town and City Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Hitchin Town and City Memories

A view of St Marys church in 1931, with the War Memorial in the foreground. In 1752, the Rewd William Cole wrote that the tower was `one of the most clumsy and heavy ones I ever saw`. Perhaps `solid` is a kinder description.

This is an extract from Hitchin Town and City Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.