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Downton

Downton photos (18 available)

Old photo of Downton

Downton maps (2 available)

Old map of Downton

Downton books (17 available)

Downton memories

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You can also read memories of nearby places in Wiltshire below.

Wiltshire memories

My Family

My father's family lived in Charlton from the late 1880s to the mid 1900s. My grandfather was a shepherd & after farm foreman for a Mr Charles Reid whose brother Bertie also had a large farm in the Charlton area. The village had a school which I attended in my early years & a village shop & bakery also selling haberdashery, my cousin Dorothy Dorothy West worked there. The baker was a Mr Duffy, the owner of the shop was a Mr Hodges.  I was in the church choir. The vicar was a Mr Winterton & by the vicarage you could cut through to the Trafalgar Estate across beautiful meadows, in the meadow there was a lovely walnut tree where you ...read more here
A memory of Charlton All Saints contributed by Roy Goodridge

The Fountain Inn

I have many fond memories of Whiteparish. My Gran and "Uncle Stan" (Stan and Florrie Pulford) had that pub for a few years until about 1975. The pub looks very different now but I can still picture my sisters and myself running around the bars in the afternoons after closing and listening (at the door from the stairs) to the merry voices from the bar.
A memory of Whiteparish contributed by Annette Kenyon

The Old School

Salisbury, Godolphin School 1928

My place of work. I have done a lot of work on collecting archive photos and making electronic copies of some of the many fascinating letters and articles written by the old girls 1880's to present.
A memory of Salisbury contributed by Richard Clarke

Street Where I Live

Salisbury, Catherine Street 1906

Nice to see that not a lot has chnaged since this photo was taken to what it is like to day.
More cars and people now of course.
A memory of Salisbury contributed by Richard Clarke

Extracts From Downton & Wiltshire books

Salisbury, Queen Street c1950

The importance of Salisbury to the military establishment after the war can be seen in this picture of Fish Row, just behind the Guildhall. A Pickfords lorry is fighting its way along the narrow street, possibly heading for the Military Tailors in the left foreground, or to the Servicemen’s Hostel next door.
An extract from from"Salisbury Pocket Album".

Salisbury, Cathedral, from Old Mill c1955

The Cathedral viewed from the south has been a favourite subject for artists—including, of course, Constable. This particular view is from the Old Mill at Harnham, and shows the Mill itself, the river and the water meadows as well as the Cathedral. Harnham Mill is a very old building, dating from around 1500. Like the first photograph in this book, the timeless beauty of this scene has remained unchanged for more than half a millennium.
An extract from from"Salisbury Pocket Album".

Salisbury, De Vaux Place 1928

On the Salisbury side of Harnham Bridge, De Vaux Place leads to The Close—the Harnham Gate is at the far end of the wall. Most of the old houses here were built in the 18th and 19th centuries using stone from the remains of the De Vaux College, which was established here by the Bishop to train clergy as early as 1262—probably the first university college in the century.
An extract from from"Salisbury Pocket Album".

Salisbury, Harnham Bridge 1928

The bridge was built by the Bishop of Salisbury around 1240 to facilitate trade between the new city and the south: the Cathedral spire can be seen in the background. Nearly seven hundred years later, the bridge was still carrying all south- bound traffic around the city and across the Avon, but a new bridge was built just downstream in 1931.
An extract from from"Salisbury Pocket Album".

Harnham, the Church 1906

The Victorian Church of All Saints in Harnham was built in 1854 and dedicated to the memory of a former Dean of Salisbury Cathedral. Today, heavy traffic thunders close by on the road in the foreground (the A3094), but drivers do not see the church because of the screen of trees which has grown up along the wall in front of it.
An extract from from"Salisbury Pocket Album".