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Woolstone

Woolstone photos (2 available)

Old photo of Woolstone

Woolstone maps (2 available)

Old map of Woolstone

Woolstone books (11 available)

Woolstone memories

A foreigner's memories

My other half  and I are having a great time here, in Woolstone at the foot of White Horse Hill for nearly 4 years now. I can only recommend this charming little village to anyone who wants to have an idea of the typical English countryside. Worth a visit for all nature lovers. You are always welcome here.
Contributed by Diana Horvath

Oxfordshire memories

A foreigner's memories

My other half  and I are having a great time here, in Woolstone at the foot of White Horse Hill for nearly 4 years now. I can only recommend this charming little village to anyone who wants to have an idea of the typical English countryside. Worth a visit for all nature lovers. You are always welcome here.
A memory of Woolstone contributed by Diana Horvath

Fire at The Rose and Crown

Ashbury, The Rose and Crown 1930

I was four when my family moved from London to Manage the Rose and Crown in 1940. The Rose and Crown was then about four hundred and fifty years old. After six months there was a devastating fire which destroyed the whole of the thatched part of the hotel and part of the building which is in Church Lane. The cottage immediately opposite across Church Lane was also burnt down. The fire started during the evening and as it was war-time it was important to put it out as soon as possible it could be seen for miles. Fourteen fire engines attended.

I was in bed and I called out to my mother for a drink. She came upstairs with ...read more here
A memory of Ashbury contributed by First Name Last Name

Paras at Watchfield

Watchfield, NAAFI Corner c1955

Hi Alan, I can confirm that there was a military airodrome at Watchfield. I remember watching from a distance as learner paras jumped from a baloon basket. The baloon was let up to a great height and the men in the basket jumped out one by one.

Tony Stayne
A memory of Watchfield contributed by First Name Last Name

Extracts From Woolstone & Oxfordshire books

Abingdon, the Crown and Thistle Hotel c1955

The Crown and Thistle Hotel, first mentioned in 1605, was a coaching inn, and one of the town’s best known ones. It is still popular, and has the truncated remains of its inn courtyard within – we see it here from the yard end of the carriageway through the building. The further part of the yard in this view now has a roof supported on posts to give shelter to tables and chairs.
An extract from from"Abingdon Photographic Memories".

Abingdon, Stert Street 1893

Skirting the modern shopping centre, our tour reaches Stert Street, which runs south towards the Market Place; in the 1890s, it was one of Abingdon’s main shopping streets. On the right, W H Hooke’s bookshop (now a jeweller’s) is the start of the market place encroachment. We are looking towards St Nicholas’s Church. Until 1883, only its tower was visible; then two pubs which jutted into the street, one on each side, were demolished for road improvement. Little survives on the left today apart from the two gables of No 3, a 15th-century house, partly hidden by the horse-less cart.
An extract from from"Abingdon Photographic Memories".

Abingdon, Bridge and River Steamer c1955

The Fraternity of the Holy Cross built the two bridges, the causeway across Nag’s Head Island, and then the long causeway that runs south for over a thousand yards across the flood plain to Culham, where they built a five-arched stone bridge between 1416 and 1422. Culham Bridge crossed the cut dug for Abbot Orderic in 1052 and known as the Swift Ditch. It is difficult nowadays to see that quiet stream as the main navigation channel, rather than the Thames itself, but so indeed it was for centuries. This view shows Burford Bridge.
An extract from from"Abingdon Photographic Memories".

Abingdon, Bridge Restaurant and Tea Gardens c1950

Stevens’s Boatyard on the east end of Nag’s Head Island also incorporated the landing stage for the Crown and Thistle Hotel in Bridge Street, some hundred yards away from the river. Note the elegant steam launch tied up at the landing stage with its striped awning to protect passengers. The house between the trees is Cosener’s House, built on the site where the cosener or kitcheners lived – he was the medieval official who ran the Abingdon Abbey’s kitchens.
An extract from from"Abingdon Photographic Memories".

West Hanney, Lamb Inn c1955

A little further along the road towards East Hanney is the 1930s Lamb Inn. Beyond it, the pair of gables belong to one of a crescent of 1950s council houses. The drainage ditch on the right has now been filled in and paved over as a footpath, and the area in front of the pub is now entirely a tarmac car park.
An extract from from"Abingdon Photographic Memories".