Bristol
Bristol maps (2 available)
Bristol books (4 available)
- 16 photos on Bristol appear in 3 Frith books - View photos of Bristol
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Bristol and Avon
Bristol memories
WLA WW2
My mother's name was Gladys Letton, she lived in Eden Grove, Horfield, she was in the WLA. Is there anyone out there that would remember her?? A great web site, thanks for any help. Carol.
Contributed by carol underwood
Lost Places
My great-grandparents lived in a place called Western Square, Clifton. Anyone have any memories of this place?? Their name was Simms. I was told that there was a pub and a sweet shop there and maybe only 6 large houses, any help please. Thankyou, Carol.
Contributed by carol underwood
Templemeads Station
My father was working on Templemeads Station around the time it was bombed, I have the feeling it was a Saturday night in the summer of 1942. I was about four years old and we were lodging in a house by the Avon with a cellar and several storeys as my mother had decided that Bristol was safer than London.
Unfortunately the raids started almost as soon as we arrived. We had to spend our nights in the Anderson shelter in the garden but my father decided we would be safer at the railway station with him where he was moving troop trains at night.(!). Fortunately as it later happened he was injured on the line the night before the ...read more here
Contributed by Anne Cross
Lost places of Bristol
Can anyone help me with some 'lost places' in Bristol?
I'm trying to locate where Navarino Place was...and also St-Augustine-the-Less church.
My Gtx3 grandfather died at no.6 Navarino Place in 1857 and many members of my family were christened/married at the above church. I'm trying to piece together their lives and what it would have been like for them working in Bristol at that time.
Contributed by Kate Spurrier
Can you help?
Can anyone tell me if this photo is taken looking towards Victoria Street or towards High Street? In the 1860's my ancesters had a business "W & F Boucher, Tea Dealers" at 1 Bridge Parade, Bristol which was just at the end of the bridge on the Victoria Street side, before the crossroads. Could the building in the photograph, advertising Lloyds Tea, be their business? Hoping someone can help!
Contributed by Margaret Martin
Extracts From Bristol & Avon books
This photograph was taken three years after the city docks, Avonmouth, and Portishead were brought together under Corporation control. This meant that once again Bristol could compete for trade; throughout much of the 19th century it had lost business owing to high dock charges levied by the money-grabbing dock company. At one time, it had been cheaper to land Bristol-bound cargoes at Liverpool and send them on by train than to discharge them on Bristol Quay.
An extract from from"Down the Severn Photographic Memories".
The Bristol diocese was created by Henry VIII in 1542, and comprised eighteen parishes within the city boundaries, fourteen others in Gloucestershire and Abbots Leigh in Somerset. It was refounded by Pope Paul IV in 1557.
An extract from from"50 Classics - Cathedrals".
One of the oldest theatres in the country still in regular use, the Theatre Royal dates back to 1766. Its design was based upon Sir Christopher Wren’s Drury Lane Theatre, London, but even when built the Royal had a semi-circular auditorium. The facade was remodelled during the 19th century.
An extract from from"Down the Severn Photographic Memories".
In 1542 Henry VIII created the diocese of Bristol, and the former church of the Augustinian priory was elevated to the rank of cathedral. The building underwent considerable restoration and remodelling between 1868 and 1888, including the construction of the nave and the west towers. Older parts include the Elder Lady Chapel (1210-1215) and the choir (1298-1363).
An extract from from"Down the Severn Photographic Memories".
Because it lacks a clerestory and triforium, the aisles rise to the same height as the nave, a feature making Bristol unique among English cathedrals. The original Norman nave was partially reconstructed at the time of the Dissolution, but then was allowed to fall into ruin. The present nave is 19th-century, and was built, along with the west towers, between 1868 and 1888.
An extract from from"50 Classics - Cathedrals".






