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Gerrards Cross

Gerrards Cross photos (12 available)

Old photo of Gerrards Cross

Gerrards Cross maps (2 available)

Old map of Gerrards Cross

Gerrards Cross books (6 available)

Gerrards Cross memories

The year I was born...

Gerrards Cross, the Pond c1960

Dearest Gerrards Cross, what were you doing the year I was born? Life was simpler then; the world a gentler place. The year I was born there was a pond. It's gone now I think, but you live on always.
Contributed by Kelly Mitchell

I came back

Gerrards Cross, the Packhorse Inn c1965

I was 5 years old the year this photo was taken. The Packhorse looks the same but the area around it seems different. Funny how memories are. I loved this town, Gerrards Cross, because this is where my Nana and Grandad lived. Every tree, every house is precious. In 2001, I brought my daughters to England from America. It was a sad year for our country after Sept. 11th. This picture reminds me of the one bright moment, lunch at the Packhorse Inn with my two precious girls, in the town where my Nana and Grandad lived.
Contributed by Kelly Mitchell

Buckinghamshire memories

The year I was born...

Gerrards Cross, the Pond c1960

Dearest Gerrards Cross, what were you doing the year I was born? Life was simpler then; the world a gentler place. The year I was born there was a pond. It's gone now I think, but you live on always.
A memory of Gerrards Cross contributed by Kelly Mitchell

I came back

Gerrards Cross, the Packhorse Inn c1965

I was 5 years old the year this photo was taken. The Packhorse looks the same but the area around it seems different. Funny how memories are. I loved this town, Gerrards Cross, because this is where my Nana and Grandad lived. Every tree, every house is precious. In 2001, I brought my daughters to England from America. It was a sad year for our country after Sept. 11th. This picture reminds me of the one bright moment, lunch at the Packhorse Inn with my two precious girls, in the town where my Nana and Grandad lived.
A memory of Gerrards Cross contributed by Kelly Mitchell

Extracts From Gerrards Cross & Buckinghamshire books

High Wycombe, view from the Guildhall c1955

From the arches of the Georgian Guildhall the camera looks down White Hart Street. The buildings on the right replace medieval market place encroachment. On the left the open area was until 1947 occupied by fine 16th- and 17th-century timber-framed buildings, unforgivably demolished for an aborted road improvement scheme.
An extract from from"High Wycombe - A History & Celebration".

High Wycombe, Frogmore Square 1921

The ancient open space of Frogmoor had from 1877 until the Second World War a fine cast-iron fountain and well trimmed trees. Note the four gables of the old Hen and Chickens on the left (rebuilt in 1888).
An extract from from"High Wycombe - A History & Celebration".

High Wycombe, the Abbey 1906

IN 1801, according to the first national census, the borough had a population of 2,349 consisting of 565 families living in 448 houses, while the rest of the town, the ancient ‘foreigns’, had a further 1,899 people, 397 families living in 370 houses.
An extract from from"High Wycombe - A History & Celebration".

High Wycombe, Hughenden Manor 1906

Arthur Vernon, Architect and Mayor The career of Arthur Vernon, architect and JP, born in 1846, is a good example of Wycombe’s new class of industrialists and professionals. In 1870, having finished his training with the architect E B Lamb, he succeeded his father as land agent to the Earl of Beaconsfield (the ennobled Benjamin Disraeli) at Hughenden, and was appointed JP in 1875. Elected a town councillor and alderman in 1870, he was elected to Buckinghamshire County Council at its inception in 1889 and appointed a magistrate for the county in 1895. Elected mayor for the first time in 1882, he was mayor again in 1883, 1891, 1905 and 1906. He was president of the Chamber of Commerce from 1899 to 1906, a captain of Wycombe Fire Brigade from its founding in 1868 until 1881, and President of the Surveyors Institution in 1902–03. In between all this he found time to design very many buildings in the town besides the Grammar School and Priory Road School. These included a temperance hall in Flackwell Heath, a lodge for Hughenden, schools, buildings in the town centre, churches, the former Conservative Club at No 28 High Street of 1897, and many houses.
An extract from from"High Wycombe - A History & Celebration".

High Wycombe, Wycombe Abbey School c1955

From the arches of the Georgian Guildhall the camera looks down White Hart Street. The buildings on the right replace medieval market place encroachment. On the left the open area was until 1947 occupied by fine 16th- and 17th-century timber-framed buildings, unforgivably demolished for an aborted road improvement scheme.
An extract from from"High Wycombe - A History & Celebration".