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Princes Risborough

Princes Risborough photos (16 available)

Old photo of Princes Risborough

Princes Risborough maps (2 available)

Old map of Princes Risborough

Princes Risborough books (6 available)

Princes Risborough memories

Parish Church

On Sept 2 1877 William Frederick Beels married Emily Arkell in the Parish Church. William Frederick Beels' son was Frederick John Beels. His son was Frederick James Beels. Frederick James lived in Risboro with his grandparents and he remembers having to go to the next town by train to get groceries. He had to go by himself because his mother looked after his two younger sisters.


Contributed by Allaine Beels

When I was a boy

Princes Risborough, Longwick Road c1955

I was born in Princes Risborough and fondly remember as a young boy going into the shop with the bay window (shown on the right of your picture) to buy sweets and giggle at the young girls. The shop was known locally as 'Blue Kettle Jacks' although it was properly known, I think, as The Old Blue Kettle.
Contributed by Dudley Bailey

Buckinghamshire memories

When I was a boy

Princes Risborough, Longwick Road c1955

I was born in Princes Risborough and fondly remember as a young boy going into the shop with the bay window (shown on the right of your picture) to buy sweets and giggle at the young girls. The shop was known locally as 'Blue Kettle Jacks' although it was properly known, I think, as The Old Blue Kettle.
A memory of Princes Risborough contributed by Dudley Bailey

Parish Church

On Sept 2 1877 William Frederick Beels married Emily Arkell in the Parish Church. William Frederick Beels' son was Frederick John Beels. His son was Frederick James Beels. Frederick James lived in Risboro with his grandparents and he remembers having to go to the next town by train to get groceries. He had to go by himself because his mother looked after his two younger sisters.


A memory of Princes Risborough contributed by Allaine Beels

Extracts From Princes Risborough & Buckinghamshire books

Whitchurch, Oving Road c1955

Moving east, the route passes through Whitchurch on its way back to Aylesbury. Whitchurch is a long village with many fine houses and cottages, and also the remains of Hugh of Bolbec’s early 12th-century earthwork castle. Oving Road runs east from the High Street; this view is taken beyond its junction with Market Hill looking west, showing the mix of building materials found in the village: timber-framing, brick, local crumbly limestone, thatch, tiles and slate.
An extract from from"Aylesbury Photographic Memories".

Oving, Church and Black Boy Inn c1955

The Black Boy is on the left, with the Victorian school, now a house, beyond the car. The ugly lean-to on the cottage has been replaced by a conservatory, and the railings by a rubble stone wall. The church, like Quainton’s, was substantially rebuilt, this time in the 1860s, a not uncommon result of medieval use of the local highly friable limestone.
An extract from from"Aylesbury Photographic Memories".

Oving, the Village c1955

Moving north-east of Waddesdon, the last two villages on this tour, Oving and Whitchurch, are on the Quainton- Whitchurch Hills, a ridge of Portland limestone that gives fine views over the Vale of Aylesbury to the south and towards Buckingham to the north. Oving is a most attractive village. Here we see Magpie Cottage, a fine 17th-century timber- framed thatched cottage with whitewashed infill panels, hence the name, presumably.
An extract from from"Aylesbury Photographic Memories".

Haddenham, Church End Green 1951

Down at Church End there is another more well-known and photographed pond; it and the 13th-century parish church are to the left of the War Memorial. This view shows the characteristic rendered walls of the village houses. The render hides walls built in the local limey clay known as ‘witchert’, a corruption of white earth. Alcohol is also well represented here: the house on the right was the maltster’s, the maltings being in the yard behind, while two other houses in this view were once pubs.
An extract from from"Aylesbury Photographic Memories".

Aylesbury, County Asylum, Stone 1897

This view looks towards the main entrance ranges, which were altered and added to by Brandon in the 1860s and 1870s. On the left, out of view, is Brandon’s chapel, a surprisingly large cruciform Gothic-style stone church of the 1860s and the only building to survive the housing estate deluge that replaced the hospital. Unfortunately, as I write it has not yet found a new use. To fix your bearings, the drive in this view is now Warren Close, one of the 1990s housing estate roads.
An extract from from"Aylesbury Photographic Memories".