Clewer
Clewer maps (2 available)
Clewer books (12 available)
Maidenhead Town Walk Guide
Paperback
Berkshire Pocket Album
Paperback
Newbury Living Memories
Paperback
Clewer memories
Be the first to add a memory of Clewer.
You can also read memories of nearby places in Somerset below.
Somerset memories
Roxtons doorway
We lived for 9 years a few doors behind where the photographer is standing. The shop with the awning on the right was Roxtons, a very trendy 'hunting shooting and fishing' shop where you had to be landed gentry to get in the door. If you were to watch from our upstairs window shortly after closing time, every night, the same guy would stagger up the road and have a pee in Roxtons doorway. With his heavy beard, and the same annorak worn every night in every weather, it was a most disturbing spectacle! I wonder how the paintwork is standing up?
A memory of Hungerford contributed by Donald Macdonald
Best place to live
We moved to Hungerford in 1987 just two months before Michael Ryan shot 14 people. See that white house way down on the left with one window in the top, well I lived in the house just after that. You can't see it very well but it is sited on one of the old mills and is called Mill Hatch. So called because the hatch where the water turned the wheel is still in the back garden. We had trout that lived in the garden and I would fish for them with string and bread but no hooks. They took the bait immediately and I would be able to lift them out of the water before they slipped off the string ...read more here
A memory of Hungerford contributed by Donald Macdonald
Allen family at Stockcross
What did they put in the water at Stockcross? I am just wondering as my great-grandad George Allen was born at Stockcross in 1831. He was a gardener but astonishingly he married three times and even more amazing he celebrated his golden wedding with his third wife. The family story is that he didn't like children yet he fathered an awful lot! This has been told to me by my aunt Doris Lacey who remembers her own childhood in the First World War and being rather frightened of George. He must have been tough to have worked as a gardener, became a widower twice, married three times, fathered three families and lived to the grand age of 94 !! ...read more here
A memory of Stockcross contributed by John Howard Norfolk
The Kennet.
The river is the Kennet and this view shows the junction of the Kennet river (from low level bridge on the right) and the Kennet and Avon Canal (towards the locks straight ahead). The tributary to the left is towards the West Mills flour mill (water powered). The view is upstream (West).
A memory of Newbury contributed by David Allen
Extracts From Clewer & Somerset books
This photograph of Bray shows the village centre, with
the perpendicular chalk and stone tower of the parish
church of St Michael peeping above the rooftops. The
church dates from the time of Edward I and is built on
the site of the original Norman church.
An extract from from"Berkshire Pocket Album".
Four years after this photograph was taken, the Thames burst its banks
and floodwater raged through Bray. According to local sources, a fish was
even caught in the high street.
An extract from from"Berkshire Pocket Album".
Whitchurch is Pangbourne’s nearest
neighbour. This photograph captures the
atmosphere and feel of the village around
the turn of the century. Sir John Soane,
who rebuilt the Bank of England, was
born here.
An extract from from"Berkshire Pocket Album".
Whitchurch is Pangbourne’s nearest
neighbour. This photograph captures the
atmosphere and feel of the village around
the turn of the century. Sir John Soane,
who rebuilt the Bank of England, was
born here.
An extract from from"Berkshire Pocket Album".
A late 19th-century advertisement for the George Hotel reads: ‘This
house, being in the centre of the picturesque scenery of Pangbourne, affords
every accommodation for tourists, boating parties or anglers visiting the neighbourhood.
An extract from from"Berkshire Pocket Album".







