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Plumber, Dorset

Plumber maps

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

Plumber map

Historic map of Plumber

Dorset map

Illustrated Victorian map of Dorset

Plumber map

Historic Map of any Plumber postcode

Plumber maps
View all Plumber maps

Plumber photos

We have no photos of Plumber, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Fifehead Neville, Kingston, Sturminster Newton, Okeford Fitzpaine, Ibberton, Hazelbury Bryan

Plumber books

Displaying 3 of 14 books about Plumber and the local area.   View all Plumber books

Dorset Revisited Photographic Memories
Paperback
$28

Dorset Photographic Memories
Paperback
$28

Dorset Villages Photographic Memories
Paperback
$28

Plumber books
View all 14 Plumber and Dorset books

Memories of Plumber

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

Dorset memories

Weekends with the Jones

We used to vist Kim and Dave jones in Mappowder every weekend after we met them in Barbados in 1995. Great friends and good fun. Very special times.

Shared on 16 July 2006 by Liz Pearce.

Small but pretty

I grew up here, a tiny hamlet underneath Bulbarrow Hill. My grandfather and father are buried in the churchyard. My mother still lives here and is a great stalwart of this tiny community.

Shared on 31 August 2009 by Helene Bull.

Second World War welcome home plaques

I have lived in Shillingstone since 1977.  By default I seem to have become the village archivist.

In March I was given 14 brass plaques, still in named envelopes, which were meant to be presented to individual soldiers returning to Shillingstone after the Second World War. They were produced by the Parish Council Welcome Home Committee, under the chairmanship of... [more]

Shared on 04 August 2009 by Mike Weiner.

Coronation Day in Shillingstone plus other memories

I can remember Coronation Day in Shillingstone, the weather was not settled and there were showers, I can remember watching the crowning of the Queen on a TV which was in Mrs Fudge's house at the lower end of the village. In the afternoon we had a parade of fancy dress and walked to the recreation field where a fete was... [more]

Shared on 19 August 2008 by Brian Newman.

Shillingstone Station

I have always been interested in trains, and Shillingstone Station gives me some great memories.
I did not enjoy the best of health when I was young so spent a lot of my childhood down at the station, even on days when my asthma was bad, in the summer months when the line was busy I would take an old camp... [more]

Shared on 05 August 2008 by Brian Newman.

The Central Stores.

My parents ran the Central Stores from 1951 to 1955, their names were Tony and Eunice Jeanes. The date of c1955 is about right as this was the year that my father and mother sold the business to Mr Dean, whose sign appears in the photograph. I was two years old when my parents took over the business and... [more]

Shared on 06 April 2006 by Timothy Jeanes.

I lived and worked here.

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 by James Goodwin.

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 by Barbara Thompson.

Extracts From Plumber & Dorset books

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

Boscombe and Southbourne Photographic Memories

there is more than a hint of the building's school past in this picture. the somewhat shabby billiard room looks suspiciously like a girls' dormitory or perhaps a gym!

Bournemouth Photographic Memories

Paddle steamers arrive and depart from Boscombe's pier during its Edwardian heyday. The construction of a pier marked the town's determination to make its mark as a holiday resort, and not to be overshadowed by its larger neighbour. This structure, as with the pier at Bournemouth, was severely damaged during the Second World War, but both have been sympathetically restored. A third pier at Southbourne did not survive.

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

Bournemouth Photographic Memories

Bournemouth, once in Hampshire but now in Dorset, did not exist two hundred years ago. In 1810, Lewis Tregonwell built a holiday home on lonely heathland, close to the mouth of the tiny River Bourne. Other wealthy gentlemen followed his example, but it was to be the middle of that century before the town achieved popularity as a holiday resort.

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

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