Mells, Somerset
Mells photos
Displaying 1 of 12 old photos of Mells. View all Mells photos
Mells maps
Historic maps of Mells and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Mells maps
Mells books
Displaying 3 of 10 books about Mells and the local area. View all Mells books
2 Mells photos appear in 1 Frith book titles. You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Mells
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Somerset memories
My maternal grandparents owned Daneswood, which you reached by taking the Mells road out of Great Elm, then turning left at a bungalow set right on the edge of the Mells river valley. After passing the bungalow, Daneswood was the first of three fine Victorian houses set in their own beautiful gardens that fell away down the valley to the Mells... [more]
Shared on 23 February 2010
Our Dad was the local GP. We lived at The Delmere from birth till aged 12. We both have very fond memories of the village and have been back a couple of times 1946 - 1958
Shared on 27 October 2008
I was born in Frome and I left when i was 11 years old,I moved with my dad to Bristol. But I have to be honest, since I have left Frome about ten years ago I miss my life I had there. Even though I have been living in Bristol for the past ten years, it's never felt like home. When... [more]
Shared on 06 October 2009
I was born and raised in Frome, West End and then we moved to Green Lane. We emigrated to Canada, I did not want to leave Frome at all. I still miss home!. The pretty streets and the steep hills. I can remember swimming in the river, and fishing in it. Every Wednesday going to the market after school to pet... [more]
Shared on 31 December 2008
Frome's 'Oldest House' or 'Pepperpot' has a chequered past even in recent times. I moved to Frome in 1992 when it was being used as a Travel Agents and looked fairly run down. It then remained closed for a number of years except at christmas time when it was used as a charity card shop. The upper floors of the building... [more]
Shared on 08 June 2006
I had a friend in the late 1960s whose father, Henry Taylor, came from this village. The pair of us drove down from Leeds in an old mini-van and stopped with his grand-parents for a couple of week. We really enjoyed it and spent quite a bit of time in Knatchbull Arms! I remember he also had an auntie Shirley (his... [more]
Shared on 10 October 2009
We used to stay at Three Ashes, Stoke Hill with my grandparents most summers in the fifties. They were called Moore. My mother (now deceased) was called Enid Moore and was brought up by her grandparents, John Moore a quarryman and his wife (I do not know her first name). Her mother was called Edith Florence May Moore, but we were... [more]
Shared on 09 March 2008
Rodden farmchurch and brook near FromeSomerset
I lived at Easthill estate halfway up Styles hill. I have countless childhood memories of exploring the parish of "Rodden". The farm and church was a playground for me as achild.If i remember correctly a Mr Patterson lived in the farm, he would let us camp in the field next to the weir in our summer holidays. He would also let... [more]
Shared on 28 January 2008
Extracts From Mells & Somerset books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Mells, inspired by Frith photos.
Somerset Photographic Memories
The photographer is looking north-west downhill across the Mells Stream bridge to the village, an attractive cluster of stone houses with many thatched roofs. St Andrew's Church has one of the finest west towers in Somerset; it is early 16th-century, and over one hundred feet high, with three belfry windows side by side on each face above three blank ringing-chamber windows.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Somerset Photographic Memories
Circling Frome, we head north to the Mells Stream valley and Mells village, the home of the Horners, the nursery rhyme Little Jack Horner's family. John Horner, bailiff to the last Abbot of Glastonbury before the Dissolution of the Monasteries under Henry VIII, managed to acquire the Abbey's Mells estates. Here the photographer looks across the Mells Stream to the village and the church. ... [more]
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This is a good view of the village and St Andrew's church. Note the pony and trap setting off for the road to Frome to the left of what is now a general store and post office. On the riverbank there is now a small pumping station.
Read more and see photos from this book.
