Chiseldon
Chiseldon maps (2 available)
Chiseldon books (17 available)
- 6 photos on Chiseldon appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Chiseldon
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Chiseldon and Wiltshire
Chiseldon memories
growing up in chis
welcome to u all from brisbane australia.I have lived here for 38 years,am very happy but chiseldon will always be in my heart.Confirmed ,married and our 4 girls were baptised in chiseldon church.We injoyed the washpool and walking over the fields to coate water,,,happy days.My first dance was like many of us at the british legion hall with david hicks and his band.My special friends were ,nancy angela,wink,josieand shirlry. I have been back many times and enjoy people from my youth.Many of you will remember my mum Anastasia also my sister stacy and virginia who still lives in wroughton.Thanks to wink who introduced me to this site.
Contributed by dawn downey
Wiltshire memories
growing up in chis
welcome to u all from brisbane australia.I have lived here for 38 years,am very happy but chiseldon will always be in my heart.Confirmed ,married and our 4 girls were baptised in chiseldon church.We injoyed the washpool and walking over the fields to coate water,,,happy days.My first dance was like many of us at the british legion hall with david hicks and his band.My special friends were ,nancy angela,wink,josieand shirlry. I have been back many times and enjoy people from my youth.Many of you will remember my mum Anastasia also my sister stacy and virginia who still lives in wroughton.Thanks to wink who introduced me to this site.
A memory of Chiseldon contributed by dawn downey
village life1952
thi8s is dawn downey from brisbane australia,have been living here for 38 years and still treasure memories of my school days in wroughton .My sister virginia still lives there.If anyone sees this ,let ginny know...Remember the old school by the moat,miss morgan was our teacher,,,happy days,,we then moved to chiseldon
A memory of Wroughton contributed by dawn downey
School times
I used to attend the local Ogbourne St. George school where Mr. Bernard Crooks was the headmaster and Mrs. Twelftree was my teacher. There used to be a kitchen attached to the school but that has since been changed to a library.
A memory of Ogbourne St George contributed by Michelle Maddock
Extracts From Chiseldon & Wiltshire books
Inside, there are many monuments, including a number of interesting tablets of the Georgian period to members
of the Calley family of Burderop Park. Another tablet commemorates Edward Mellish, 1707, and shows a large
family, the man kneeling facing west and the woman east. The church is on the outskirts of the village, and is more
related to the countryside beyond it rather than to the built-up area.
An extract from from"Wiltshire Churches Photographic Memories".
Looking West
This view looks down
Commercial Road towards
the old market site. The
street at this time was
largely occupied by small
businesses such as (on
the right) Harold the
jeweller’s, with next door
Hiscock’s the builder
and decorator’s. On the
opposite corner of the
Morley Street junction
was Taymac the builders’
merchants (now the site
of the West Bromwich
Building Society).
An extract from from"Swindon Living Memories".
This public house at Stratton St Margaret owes its existence
to the Wilts and Berks Canal which ran nearby. The original
inn stood on the opposite side of the road, on the south-
western corner of what is now the busy Oxford road into
Swindon. The original building was demolished, and a new
one built in 1937-38 on its present site. One of its most
famous landlords since then has been Johnnie Stiles, whose
band had brought prestige to the town when winning the All
British Dance Band Championships in both 1948 and 1949.
Standing on the A419 Swindon by-pass and A420 Oxford
Road interchange, the pub was subsequently extended and
modernized in 1982.
An extract from from"Swindon Living Memories".
The Town Hall, standing in the middle of the High Street,
was given by Lawrence Hyde, first Earl of Rochester, in 1700.
Restored in 1889, it was presented to the town by Lady
Meux in 1906. Until the restoration in 1889, under the open
staircase there was a lock-up or blind house. At one time the
building was used as a court house; it has subsequently been
used as a branch of the County Library and as a museum. In
recent years it was restored with the help of English Heritage,
initially in an overall grey finish, but it has since been restored
to its traditional timber-framed look.
An extract from from"Swindon Living Memories".
Looking West
We are looking
across the lake
to the houses in
Durham Street, with
the Presbyterian
church roof in the
centre of the picture,
and the Holy Rood
Roman Catholic
church on the right.
The vegetation on
the far bank has
now grown to fill
the open spaces
shown here, giving
the whole site an
impression of being
far removed from
the centre of a busy
and thriving town.
An extract from from"Swindon Living Memories".







