West Ilsley
West Ilsley photos (13 available)
West Ilsley maps (2 available)
West Ilsley books (12 available)
Maidenhead Town Walk Guide
Paperback
Berkshire Pocket Album
Paperback
Newbury Living Memories
Paperback
West Ilsley memories
Be the first to add a memory of West Ilsley.
You can also read memories of nearby places in Berkshire below.
Berkshire memories
My dad the police officer
I was born in the 1980s and my father was Alan Prior. He used to work with Jim(or James ) Heath. We lived in the 'police' house with my mother Dawn. I remember being snowed in at one point and a lovely lady in the village let a whole coach full of us (we were supposed to go to school) invade her house and gave us cups of tea. I also remember my mum used to be a horse judge, I think, and we used to go to the stables a lot, and my mother ran the village shop at one point. My dad also was very close to the late 'Mr Chips' who also lived in the village, I cannot ...read more here
A memory of East Ilsley contributed by claire louise prior
I lived in Hampstead Norris from 1945 to 1962
I lived in Hampstead Norris as it was known in those days from 1945 to 1962 when I departed for greener pastures(I thought). I have had this longing for a while now to get in touch with people I went to school with in the village and at Compton. If you know my history you may or may not want to contact me. I would really like to hear from anyone who lived in the village at those times. I remember John Smith, Michael Wheeler, Chris Cannings, Angela Jefferys, Frank Ballard, the Simmons family, the Painter family, John, Reg, Roy and Anne Wheeler, Violet Marshall, I think the list is endless when I think about those days and of course my ...read more here
A memory of Hampstead Norreys contributed by David Street
fear of wells
The well incident at yattendon scared my father. We had heard about it through relatives and we lived in east tytherley at the time. I remember my father spending a weekend tapping floors and trying to lift flag stones in our kitchen because he was convinced that there was a well under our home- there wasnt.
A memory of Yattendon contributed by joy milligan
The Royal Oak
'The Oak' is the only pub and hotel in the village and in the fifties our next door neighbour was the cleaner there. She would cycle to the village from the farm on a heavy green bicycle in a slow and ponderous manner that has stayed with me to this day. I must have been about nine when the awful event happened that haunted me for years. Police came to the village school one day to ask our neighbour's daughter where her mum was going that morning as she was not at work. The doors in the porch of the pub had been sticking for some months and the cleaner had complained and asked for something to be done, to no ...read more here
A memory of Yattendon contributed by Maggi Stamp-Loshak
Extracts From West Ilsley & Berkshire books
This general view of
Northbrook Street shows
the gable end to the left
of a shop front, above
which is a clock. This is all
that remains of cloth-
maker John Winchcombe’s
house. On the left is
Richard Shops and to the
left of it is an advert for
Rentaset – 9 shillings
weekly for a 19-inch television.
An extract from from"Newbury Living Memories".
One of the striking
features of this
photograph is that
many of the shops
have awnings to keep
their wares cool and
shaded in summer – a
rare sight today.
Though rather
cluttered, this
photograph of the
street does allow you a
distant glimpse of the
clock tower at the far end.
An extract from from"Newbury Living Memories".
The view from this bridge
has changed significantly in
the last 50 years. Much of the
greenery has gone and the
scene on the right is
dominated by Camp
Hopson’s furniture store as
well as several other modern
buildings. The canal is in
constant use today so the
towpath to the right of it is
broad and clear. The tower of
the old Town Hall can still be seen.
An extract from from"Newbury Living Memories".
Victoria Park lies to the east of Newbury town centre and covers an area of seventeen acres. The park includes a statue of
Queen Victoria (see photograph N61083, above), guarded by two terracotta lions, which originally stood in the Market Place.
An extract from from"Newbury Living Memories".
This familiar parade of shops
on the A4 was quite new
when this photograph was
taken. The scene is much
busier today, with much
more traffic and many more
pedestrians. A set of lights
enables people to cross the
road in safety between the
Health Centre and the
chemist, second shop from
the end on the left of the picture.
An extract from from"Newbury Living Memories".







