Buckingham
Buckingham photos (31 available)
Buckingham maps (2 available)
Map of Buckinghamshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Buckinghamshire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Buckingham books (6 available)
So You Think You Know? High Wycombe
Hardback
- 13 photos on Buckingham appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Buckingham
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Buckingham and Buckinghamshire
Buckingham memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in Buckinghamshire below.
Buckinghamshire memories
Our home on the village green
I lived in Quainton in the 1950s, on the corner of The Green and Lower St. My family had the drapers shop. I remember bonfire night on the green, rolling down Mill Hill, Christmas carols, ballet lessons in the church hall and sitting the 11+ exams at school and of being sent to the Sportsmans Inn for a packet of Woods or Weights cigarettes for my father.
With my parents Ray and Sylvia Wheatley, my sister Barbara and brother Ian we emigrated to Australia but I will not forget the fun we had in Quainton
Clare Masovic nee Wheatley
A memory of Quainton contributed by Clare Masovic
The Great Linford
I had heard of The Great Linford and can trace genealogy back to the one subjects that lived on the Great Linford although it is not named after any of my ancestors.
In 2000, I had the opportunity to vist London and rented a car and drove out to Milton Keynes and the Great Linford just to see what it was all about. It is amazing that the buildings have endured as long as they have. I found it peacful and serene even though the Great Linford Manor is now a recording studio. I hope to return one day and spend more than a couple of hours and see more of the area.
A memory of Great Linford contributed by Paul Linford
My roots
I lived at the family home at the Three Locks, which was about one mile out of Stoke Hammond. Every Sunday from around five years of age, I walked to St Luke's Parish Church, Stoke Hammond to attend Sunday School. In later years I was the Sunday School teacher for a time. I was also confirmed here.
Along with my brother, I joined the church choir which we were members for many years. I remember we walked to the church services very often three times every Sunday. My brother also played the organ during his late teens, and he was a member of the bell ringing team. I also learnt to ring the bells about eight years ago at this ...read more here
A memory of Stoke Hammond contributed by stephanie mcpherson
From birth to 25yrs
I lived at the house just at the top of photo. The outbuildings can clearly be seen in the adjoining field to the family home. I spent all my childhood years playing with my brother and friends here. I used to love watching the working barges going through the locks. My grandfather kept the Three Locks (known then as The New Inn) as publican for 16yrs. (That was when the barges were horse drawn.)
A memory of Stoke Hammond contributed by stephanie mcpherson
Extracts From Buckingham & Buckinghamshire books
This view looks towards
the Market Square from
the junction with Well
Street. The road curves
attractively to the bowed
end of the 18th-century
Town Hall. The gilded
swan now faces to the left.
An extract from from"Buckinghamshire Photographic Memories".
Further down, into
High Street, most
buildings survive, with
the attractively treed
former cattle market on
the left, whose trees
were originally planted
in 1887 as an avenue to
the Hospital.
An extract from from"Buckinghamshire Photographic Memories".
The Board School
became Chandos
First School, and is
now (2002) Grenville
Combined School. Its
baroque-ish design is
unchanged, although the
cupola has long gone.
An extract from from"North Buckinghamshire Photographic Memories".
Built by Lord Cobham
of Stowe in 1748 to
help regain the assizes
for Buckingham, and
extended in 1839,
the castellated Gothic
building has been
superbly restored as a
fascinating museum. The
ivy, of course, has been
stripped off.
An extract from from"Buckinghamshire Photographic Memories".
The School buildings, seen from across Eleven Acre Lake, were intended to fit into the Georgian parkland.
Designed in 1924 by Clough Williams-Ellis, the architect of Portmeirion, they compete with Vanbrugh’s 1721
Rotondo temple on the right.
An extract from from"Buckinghamshire Photographic Memories".






