Grange-Over-Sands
Grange-Over-Sands photos (75 available)
Grange-Over-Sands maps (2 available)
Grange-Over-Sands books (7 available)
Grange-over-Sands Photographic Memories
Paperback
Kendal - A History and Celebration
Hardback
- 61 photos on Grange-Over-Sands appear in 3 Frith books - View photos of Grange-Over-Sands
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Grange-Over-Sands and Cumbria
Grange-Over-Sands memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in Cumbria below.
Cumbria memories
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I have lived in the pretty village of Cartmel all my life and I love the quiet, calming atmosphere we have here. Once a friend and myself used to walk through the village with a nanny goat called Nancy and her 2 kids, we'd arrive in the square and rest at the market cross with the goats playing on the "fish slabs" which caused a lot of amusement to the visitors, who in turn must have thought we were slightly mad! Near by is the stately home of the Cavendish family, Holker Hall, once upon a time the Duke of Edinburgh used to compete in the carriage driving trials here and on the sunday himself and The Queen went to ...read more here
A memory of Cartmel contributed by Sharon Dance
Feathers in our hair
My aunt and uncle went to live in Flookburgh in the early 1950s. My mum, brother and myself went to stay with them on holiday. I can't remember where we got the coach to but my uncle laughed when we got off the coach with paper carrier bags with our clothes in (no suitcases for us in those days). The road was a country lane (going down the road at the side of the cross) towards the sea. I remember there was a farm on the right hand side where we used to buy milk and further along on the left was their little house (it could have been a bungalow). We went to Humphrey Head where we collected sea gull ...read more here
A memory of Flookburgh contributed by Dianne Littlewood
The Whitewater Hotel at Backbarrow, near Newby Bridge
I stayed in Backbarrow for several days at the Whitewater Hotel which has been converted from a former mill building by the river. The lobby of this lovely "spa hotel" has display cabinets of memorabilia from its industrial heyday in the last century which was interesting and I recommend a visit.
My wife Elizabeth and I used this as a base to explore nearby Windermere including a ride on the heritage railway line from Haverthwaite to Lakeside. There are lovely woodland walks signposted in the hills to the north of Backbarrow.
A memory of Backbarrow contributed by John Howard Norfolk
Staveley village
I would like to share with your readers that my father Alban Crossley was born in Staveley and his mother Ethel Crossley (nee Bateman) worked in the bobbin mill in Staveley. Unfortunately my grandfather Michael Crossley died as a result of a motorbike accident. My father died in 1983 age 59years old.
We lived in Staveley in 1976 and I really liked the area and have been to visit it on a few occasions over the years. I wonder does any of your readers have any photos of any of my relatives as I have very little information on them apart from my father photographed in the book on Staveley school winning a race. Looking ...read more here
A memory of Newby Bridge contributed by Ann Brennan
Extracts From Grange-Over-Sands & Cumbria books
In the centre a horse and cart stand by the pond; perhaps they have visited this spot so that the animal could have a drink
of fresh water at Picklefoot Spring, which emerges here. This spring has a constant flow of water and a reputation for never
running dry, even in times of severe drought.
An extract from from"Grange-over-Sands Photographic Memories".
Until the railway arrived, only 35 years before this photograph was taken, Grange-over-Sands was little more than a fishing village, looking out across the Kent estuary to the rest of Lancashire. No longer reliant on a hazardous route across the sands, the town quickly grew, catering for the well-to-do, who came here to live or take their holidays.
An extract from from"Lancashire - A Second Selection Photographic Memories".
There is no traffic on Main
Street, which at this time
had a problem caused by a
dog-leg in the road by the
tree visible in the centre
background. Note all the
blinds outside the shops on
the left. The sign outside
the shop on the right shows
that they were the agent for
Pullars, the dyers.
An extract from from"Grange-over-Sands Photographic Memories".
The Grange Hotel was built following the coming of the railway.
Its appearance was much the same in a town guide of 1961,
when it was advertised as having central heating with fires in all
rooms. By 1972 the fires had become electric fires, and the tennis
courts had gone; now bungalows occupy their site.
An extract from from"Grange-over-Sands Photographic Memories".
The Institute was originally the local reading room, where people came to read books and
newspapers. It was the first place of adult education in Grange. Now, it is used for various
meetings and functions.
An extract from from"Grange-over-Sands Photographic Memories".







