Wells
Wells maps (2 available)
Wells books (11 available)
Wells Town Walk Guide
Paperback
Wells Photographic Memories
Paperback
Wells - A History and Celebration
Hardback
- 119 photos on Wells appear in 4 Frith books - View photos of Wells
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Wells and Somerset
Wells memories
Be the first to add a memory of Wells.
You can also read memories of nearby places in Somerset below.
Somerset memories
I have just been transported back in time by this photo
I was born in Wells .. and lived and went to school in Westbury.. my grandfather was Joseph Carver and my grandmother Elizabeth Carver (Libby) I used to walk up this hill to my grans cottage which was situated at the top of Westbury (Old Ditch) my Uncle Toms Cottage was to the right (not in picture) and I used to call in and see him on the way past .. alas all three relatives passed away several years ago .. and I now live in Weston-super-Mare .. but have fond memories of the village .. and my ancestry .. the Derricks and the Carvers have lived in the village for centuries ..
read more here
A memory of Westbury Sub Mendip contributed by First name Last name
A changing townscape
Memories of Shepton Mallet.
I was born in Kilver Street, Shepton Mallet just two years before the Second World War was declared and have drawn upon my family and my own memories to produce 18 books of local history on the town and the surrounding area. Little had changed in the townscape during the previous 100 years, and it was until the 1960s that widescale demolition and rebuilding took place. In many cases this erased much of the 19th century built townscape. Should anyone like to know more about my town's history I would be glad to help, or visit my website: freddavis.co.uk .
Fred Davis
A memory of Shepton Mallet contributed by First name Last name
I live in Shepton Mallet
I was Shepton Mallet Carnival Queen and it was very good to do the job. My Granny and Grampy lived in Shepton Mallet and my dad and uncle were born in Shepton Mallet as well my mum who would've been the Shepton Mallet Carnival Queen in 1965. Pete and I are building a shed down Darshill. It used to be a pig barn and it is going to be wonderful when it is finished. We will have to take photos of the shed now and before. I got the map of Darshill and it shows us that the shed that me and my friend done is on the map
A memory of Shepton Mallet contributed by LOUISE MANSHIP
The Roman Way
We moved to Glastonbury in 1994 and left in 2000.
We loved our time there and have wonderful memories of walking our dogs along Wearyall Hill and across the fields at the back of our house then along the banks of the River Brue. We were able to sit up in bed with a cup of tea in the morning and look at the sunrise over Glastonbury Tor. A very special place that we go back and visit often.
A memory of Glastonbury contributed by Beverley Thouless
Extracts From Wells & Somerset books
This beautifully carved porch, dating from 1230, was the main entrance to the cathedral. In a small room above the porch
there is a plaster drawing-floor onto which the master mason drew his designs.
An extract from from"Wells Photographic Memories".
The stone bench along the wall was the only seating in medieval times, and origin of the saying ‘the weakest go to the
wall’. The south aisle leads to Chancellor Sugar’s chantry chapel, which juts out on the left of the aisle. The south transept,
beyond, contains some of the more famous carved capitals.
An extract from from"Wells Photographic Memories".
Above the High Altar, we can see the Great East or Golden
Window with its magnificent medieval stained glass Tree of
Jesse, which survived undamaged despite the iconoclasts; it is
one of the largest and most complete 14th-century windows in
existence. The stalls in the choir have carved misericords.
An extract from from"Wells Photographic Memories".
This is the oldest part of the cathedral - the stiff-leaf carvings on the capitals of the north-west side are simpler in design
than those east of this point. The bishop’s seat or ‘cathedra’ is on the left.
An extract from from"Wells Photographic Memories".
The chapter house was completed in about 1306. Behind the pillar is the bishop’s seat, and each member of the chapter has
his own stall. The carved faces on the walls have survived (some of them are comical), and the bosses in the vault and some
pieces of original medieval glass remain. After speaking at trials, the witnesses were kept seated around the central pillar, to
prevent contact with those waiting outside.
An extract from from"Wells Photographic Memories".







