The Francis Frith Collection.
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Tilshead

Tilshead photos (63 available)

Old photo of Tilshead

Tilshead maps (2 available)

Old map of Tilshead

Tilshead books (17 available)

Tilshead memories

Playing

I lived in Tilshead from about the age of five until I was 12. My surname then was Cruse and we lived at West End. I have very fond memories of my life in Tilshead. I still write to Mrs Ruth Kyte and used to go to their Sunday School every week at the Baptist Chapel. We used to have outings and I can remember going to Greatwood camp with the Sunday School.
Me and my brothers used to spend a lot of our time playing up at the lodge, it was a great place to be, lots of space and trees and walks etc, although it is now closed off to the public because it is military land.
We used ...read more here
Contributed by Veronica Pearson

my childhood living in tilshead

my memories of tilshead ,well i lived there from1953 till 1968[from the age of 2 to 15 years old..every body seemed to know each other in the village ,a friendly small community as i remember .I first went to tilshead primary school [yes 2 classrooms and a big pot belly stove for warmth in winter. .Mrs lambert was our teacher,and a strict but fair lady she was too ,we just happened to live next door to her in the last house in west end .no6.my friends were graham gosney [son of the local copper]paul booth ,dereck potter and more.there always seemed to be things to do ,i remember playing the pinballs and juke box in the canteen at the bottom of ...read more here
Contributed by ken dunmow

I used to live there.

I used to live with my family in the Black Horse Pub from around 1963-1965.  I left just after starting secondary school.  I still live in Wiltshire and often drive through Tilshead for a trip down memory lane.  I am now in my early 50's but have many memories of my time there.  Most notably my time spent in the little school in the village - just two classrooms.  I have seen photos of Tilshead now and nothing much seems to have changed.
Contributed by Rose Newitt

Tilshead in the last century!

Tilshead was the place where I was born and have lived in for a long time.  It is a quiet village of around 400 or so people.  There was and still is a post office.  There was a pub called The Bell but is now a private thatched house.  There are still two other pubs, The Rose and Crown, and The Black Horse. There were three shops but now only one.  There was and still is a petrol station - which has grown a lot since 1966.  The village of Tilshead still has all but a (very) few of the houses which are shown on the photos on the Francis Frith website.  It is a really homely and friendly place where ...read more here
Contributed by Anita Mundy

The Old Post Office

Tilshead, the Post Office c1955

I have found this very postcard in an old photo album of my late aunt, although mine I think is older, and not c1955. I believe that she lived here and may have been the post mistress in the 1930's/40's. Her name was Dulcie Donovan. the ref. on the postcard is Frith TSD(or O) 6. I wonder if anyone there remembers her.
Contributed by pauline watson

The Browns

Tilshead, Noads House, High Street c1965

First saw this house and street when I was a baby. Noads House was Mr and Mrs Browns house. It is still there in 2006 looking just the same!
Contributed by Anita Mundy

Extracts From Tilshead & Wiltshire books

Tilshead, Thomas A'Beckett Church c1965

The north aisle wall was moved when the aisle was widened in 1846, but the Norman arcades remain; they have three bays, with unmoulded arches of simple imposts with slight chamfering. The Norman circular font is banded with diagonal incisions. The communion rail is 18th-century.
An extract from from"Wiltshire Churches Photographic Memories".

Rowde, the Village 1899

The thatched building on the left is early 17th-century wattle and daub with some brick infill, and was an alehouse called the Lamb. Adjoining it was a boot maker, and the projecting part was a separate residence.
An extract from from"Devizes Town and City Memories".

Devizes, Dunkirk Hill 1903

This shows a very deserted unmade road leading into town, more familiar to motorists today, who have to slow down at the top in order to join the Bath Road into Devizes. Over the years the foliage and the soil on both sides has been cut back to keep the problem of earth slippage under control.
An extract from from"Devizes Town and City Memories".

Devizes, Drews Pond 1899

This idyllic scene could be taken straight out of a Hardy novel. Unfortunately, the cottage was demolished in 1960. The pond is on the right, hidden by the trees.
An extract from from"Devizes Town and City Memories".

Devizes, Hartmoor 1899

East Lodge can just be glimpsed at the entrance to the drive from Hartmoor Road which leads to Old Park House. It is a listed building and is described as ‘2 storeys, rough cast on brick with thatch roof, the eaves swept down on west side to form veranda with flint and rubble columns’.
An extract from from"Devizes Town and City Memories".