Carisbrooke
Carisbrooke photos (19 available)
Carisbrooke maps (2 available)
Map of Isle Of Wight
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
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Carisbrooke books (3 available)
- 1 photos on Carisbrooke appear in 3 Frith books - View photos of Carisbrooke
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Carisbrooke and Isle Of Wight
Carisbrooke memories
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Isle Of Wight memories
Grandad's war days and our family hols
My grandfather was stationed on the island "During the War"and was very friendly with a family from Arreton called Hendy. The mother's name was Lil and the father was affectionally called"Tit" (because he was quite small). After the war, my gramps and all the family visited Aunt Lil and Uncle Tit quite frequently. Tit grew his own veg in a back garden, I remember picking pea swads for him when I visited. They had a daughter called Ena (can't remember her husband's name) and a grandson called Ralph. Ralph, my mum said, worked for a garage somewhere in Sandown when he got older. The last address I have for Ena is at Arreton, near Newport, I.O.W. They were always very friendly ...read more here
A memory of Arreton contributed by joanne fisk
An Arreton childhood
I lived in Arreton from birth until my marriage. My family consisted of Dad and Mum, my sister Gill, my paternal grandparents and a retired infant teacher Miss Muskett. She taught me at home before I began school at the village CE school where I remained from 1936-1942. Headmaster was Mr White known to us all as Skipper White. At school in wartime meant carrying our gas masks everywhere, getting to the air raid shelter if a raid occurred while we were at school. During the Battle of Britain we had no time to get to the shelter and had to get under our desks for cover as the planes fought in the sky above us. Sometimes we were machine-gunned as ...read more here
A memory of Arreton contributed by Pat Phillips
Captain Macpherson
My late mother told me that she was related to Miss White, daughter of the Rev. Richard Walton White. His daughter left the manor and or land to Captain Macpherson in 1911. Although we have no claims on this family, we have no first names of Miss White or Captain Macpherson's nephew for our family tree. Any historical history and or photographs would be great.
A memory of Shalfleet contributed by sylvia ross
Hell and high water!
I worked in my Aunts ladies wear shop (Kays), and remember being flodded when heavy rain combined with high tide caused the shop to have water running through from back to the front with my friend Maureen and myself sweeping the ensuing water out of the front door. In those days the floor was bare board and it soon dried out. As it was summer we thought it was good fun and no harm was caused.
A memory of Cowes contributed by June Jackson
Extracts From Carisbrooke & Isle Of Wight books
Carisbrooke’s dramatic castle, rich in history,
made the town a popular tourist attraction with
early visitors, including the poet Tennyson,
who may have incorporated aspects of the
castle into his romantic verse.
An extract from from"Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album".
A Roman villa was unearthed at Carisbrooke in 1859 and found
to cover an area of some 120 feet by 55 feet. The excavations
revealed a building of several rooms, including a semi-circular bath
and a central heating system.
An extract from from"Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album".
The water in the castle’s deep well was drawn for
centuries by the use of donkey labour, a fresh supply
being essential in times of siege. Visitors in more peaceful
times have had the happier choice of several tea rooms
when in need of refreshment.
An extract from from"Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album".
Among the many monuments within the church is the tomb of
Lady Dorothy Wadham, the sister of Queen Jane Seymour. The
nearby epitaph to Charles Dixon, a local blacksmith, ends with
the lines ‘My fire-dried corpse here lies at rest, My soul, snake-like,
soars to be blest’.
An extract from from"Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album".
Victorian visitors had a number of inns to choose from when seeking
sustenance in the town, some acting as fully-fledged hotels. A Victorian
guidebook noted that ‘the coach excursionist will be saved the trouble
of choosing his quarters, as the coaches usually set him down at the
Carisbrooke Castle or the Eight Bells’.
An extract from from"Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album".






