Chalfont St Peter
Chalfont St Peter photos (21 available)
Chalfont St Peter 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!
Chalfont St Peter books (7 available)
So You Think You Know? High Wycombe
Hardback
- 2 photos on Chalfont St Peter appear in 1 Frith books - View photos of Chalfont St Peter
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Chalfont St Peter and Buckinghamshire
Chalfont St Peter memories
Learning to ride a bike
We found an old bike that had no chain and no brakes. Every day after school we would get the bike out of the gorse, where we had hidden it, and take it in turns to free wheel down this slope. Then push it back up and someone else would have a go. I would have been seven.
Contributed by Donald Macdonald
Going to school
I walked past this clock every day on my way to school. Down past the clock on the left was a news agent where I learned to shoplift. Almost every day I would steal from them and never got caught. I also started stealing from the Handy Stores at the top of Gold Hill common, anyone remember that place? When it was getting knocked down I found an old plaster wall picture which I took. I visited my mother in 2006 and she still has it hanging on her wall and she was 81 at the time. In the early to mid 60's we had some great winters and we would sledge down the common and sometimes right out onto this ...read more here
Contributed by Donald Macdonald
A Bren gun
Gold Hill common has an upper flat grassy area and then a sloping area, which leads down into the town, which is covered with scrub, not the town of course. This photo is right on the edge of the upper part. In 1963, when I was a boy of eight, the army came and laid on an exhibition, I guess this was a recruitment drive. They carried out a mock battle with half tracks and guns firing blanks and yellow smoke billowing slowly across the common. If you take the main footpath from Layters Green Lane (?) across the common, the swings and stuff will be off to your left, there was/is a hawthorn tree to the right of the path ...read more here
Contributed by Donald Macdonald
Buckinghamshire memories
Going to school
I walked past this clock every day on my way to school. Down past the clock on the left was a news agent where I learned to shoplift. Almost every day I would steal from them and never got caught. I also started stealing from the Handy Stores at the top of Gold Hill common, anyone remember that place? When it was getting knocked down I found an old plaster wall picture which I took. I visited my mother in 2006 and she still has it hanging on her wall and she was 81 at the time. In the early to mid 60's we had some great winters and we would sledge down the common and sometimes right out onto this ...read more here
A memory of Chalfont St Peter contributed by Donald Macdonald
Extracts From Chalfont St Peter & Buckinghamshire books
The old centre of Chalfont St Peter has
suffered greatly, by-passed too closely
and swamped by housing estates, the
houses steadily increasing in size before
merging with the affluent ‘Metroland’
of Gerrards Cross. The White Hart on
the left survives, as, of course, does St
Peter’s church beyond the neo-Georgian
shopping parade. A Georgian tower and
church of the 1710s, heavily remodelled
in the 1850s and recast in Gothic style in
polychrome brick by G E Street: he had
described the Georgian church as ‘a very
ugly brick church’.
An extract from from"Amersham, Chesham And Rickmansworth Photographic Memories".
Up the hill towards one of
Chalfont St Peter’s commons,
Gold Hill, Tudor-style shops and
flats were built on the north
side of the road in 1922, called
Market Place and decked out with
fake timber-framing and gables.
Note echoes of wartime in ‘The
Bombed Shop’. The cottages
at the far end went in slum
clearance and were replaced in
1966 by an insensitive shopping
precinct with flats over. St Peter’s
Court is another contribution to
the loss of the historic character
of the village.
An extract from from"Amersham, Chesham And Rickmansworth Photographic Memories".
We finish with a view of the River Chess winding along the floor of its flat but narrow valley, through its Chiltern
landscape towards Rickmansworth near Loudwater Farm, an area much changed since this view was taken.
An extract from from"Amersham, Chesham And Rickmansworth Photographic Memories".
This view looks south
towards All Saints Church
and shows how the tower
and spire originally closed
the vista well, although
nowadays the church is
hidden by high hedges
and a fine cedar. On the
right is the 18th century
Artichoke pub which
survives but with an added
slated roof linking ground
floor bay windows.
An extract from from"Amersham, Chesham And Rickmansworth Photographic Memories".
This is an interesting view of
All Saints at the south end of
the Green. The church, built
in 1872 to designs of one J
Norton, is in a fairly routine
design but with a circular
turret and spire on the north
or Green side. In 1907 the
exciting architect Temple
More added a nave, turning
the old church into the north
aisle. Moore used brick with
stone bands and produced
a most
successful design.
An extract from from"Amersham, Chesham And Rickmansworth Photographic Memories".






