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Martlesham, Suffolk

Martlesham photos

Displaying 1 of 5 old photos of Martlesham.   View all Martlesham photos

5
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Martlesham maps

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

Martlesham map

Historic map of Martlesham

Suffolk map

Illustrated Victorian map of Suffolk

Martlesham map

Historic Map of any Martlesham postcode

Martlesham maps
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Martlesham books

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

Suffolk Living Memories
Paperback
rrp £14  £11.20

Suffolk Villages Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £14  £11.20

Suffolk - A Second Selection Photographic Memories
Paperback
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Martlesham books
View all 10 Martlesham and Suffolk books

Memories of Martlesham

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Suffolk memories

Boulge was my home

My family owned the Boulge Hall estate at the time of your photograph. I was christened in Boulge Church in 1940.
I am the 3rd Baronet of Boulge Hall and the last of the line.
The summer house on the right of the picture was built by my grandfather Sir Robert Eaton White.
I remember Boulge well throughout my childhood. How... [more]

Shared on 18 July 2009 by Christopher White.

William Gildersleeve & Thomas Robert Gildersleeve

In the year 1492 William Gildersleeve and in 1544 Thomas Robert Gildersleeve were born in Witnesham, Suffolk, England.
Gildersleeves first found in Norfolk area where they were anciently seated as Lords of the Manor.
If anyone knows any Gildersleeves (Spelling variations of the family name includes Gildersleeve, Gildersleve, Gilderslieve, Gildensleeve, Gildensleve, Sildsleeve, Gildsleve, Guildersly).

Shared on 19 June 2008 by Susan Poston.

Books

I loved going in the Ancient House as a child. Lots of stationary and books. I remember the floors squeaked.Shame it is no longer a book store.

Shared on 01 July 2009 by Brenda Bixler.

I worked here

I worked at Bowhill Elliot and White shoe store at the top of The Walk in 1960  Every morning I walked through here to go to work. I still e-mail a friend who worked at Turners Photography also in The Walk.  We were like a family in The Walk, greeting each other every day, and going to lunch.

Shared on 01 July 2009 by Brenda Bixler.

Shoe shop

The shoe shop at number 44 was Thomas Alderton and Son, shown on the 1871 census as the family living there, presumably above the shop, it was still there in 1985 with the original street frontage, is it there now?

Shared on 31 January 2009

St. Lawrence Street 1960s

Back in the 1960s there was a beautiful Magnolia tree oposite the church in front of a solicitor's office in St. Lawrence Street.
Forty years have passed and I live the other side of the world.
I wonder if that tree is still there.

Shared on 30 July 2008

The model shop in The Walk

Yes Tami, I remember The Walk very well. In 1959 there was a model shop just to the right of the photo. They had wonderful little steam engines and I saved up pennies and shillings from my paper round until I could buy one.
Some years later as a young man we would drink Cob Toppers at the local pubs... [more]

Shared on 24 June 2008

Crisswell / Hall family

I would like to ask whether anyone might be able to help me piece together a mystery. Five weeks ago, whilst walking through the local Derby countryside, my wife and I discovered a briefcase dumped in a brook. There were various items, including photographs, maps, documents etc, scattered all around. Curious, I collected as much as I could and took it... [more]

Shared on 17 February 2008 by Tom Fulep.

Extracts From Martlesham & Suffolk books

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

Suffolk Villages Photographic Memories

The original timber building, dating from c1580, has two gables; the brick extension to the right is 19th-century. The (now) central gable has a delicate oriel over a wider bay window on the ground floor. The Red Lion's ship figurehead is often wrongly said to have come from a Dutch ship which fought at the battle of Sole Bay in 1672, but it actually dates from c1740. In 1896 Herbert Fletch was the landlord and local... [more]

This is an extract from Suffolk Villages Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Suffolk Living Memories

The lady on the left is leaving the single-storey extension containing the post office and posting box. Post Office Lane runs off to the left, level with the bus stop. The rear wing of the furthest house has now been raised to two storeys. On the opposite corner is the garage.

This is an extract from Suffolk Living Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Suffolk Living Memories

The Red Lion (right) dates from c1580, and has an oriel window similar to those on the Ancient House in Ipswich. The pub figurehead gave rise to the phrase 'As red as a Martlesham lion'. Opposite are the early 18th-century Red Lion Cottages, which have the same barge boards as the pub. The whole frontage has now been railed off from... [more]

This is an extract from Suffolk Living Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

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