Binstead
Binstead maps (2 available)
Map of Isle Of Wight
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Isle Of Wight
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Binstead books (1 available)
Binstead memories
Lydia and Wendy
I worked in the big hotel in Sandown, and a couple of hotels on the very seafront with two girls from Binstead, what fun we had, laughter and tears went together. I've lost touch with them but would love to hear what they are up to now and where they live. I remember Browns boating lake in Sandown, and one of the hotel managers on the front named Ken, and Itl the chipl who worked in the kitchen. The stadd were a very happy lot, Lydia and Wendy were very good friends to me, Wendy's mother worked in a shoe shop in Ryde, they lived opposite each other in a close at Binstead in council houses. I also took holidays at ...read more here
Contributed by PATRICIA HAMILTON
Youthful Pranks (in Binstead)! 1958 - 1962
I am a 67 year old British citizen and have lived for over 40 years as a rock musician in Germany. I went to Ryde School in the 60s. After I left I was lonely living in London and used come back to the island most weekends - to my friends in - wait for it! of COURSE....in Binstead. I used to stay at the parents of my schoolfriend Ian Squire, Mr & Mrs Holmes-White. Ian went to Australia later. Sometimes I stayed at Major Carleton's villa where us boys used to slip out in the night and have wild parties near the beach with the Au Pair girls from the villa. My friend Brian Read from Ryde had an old ...read more here
Contributed by Simon Hornsby
Isle Of Wight memories
Lydia and Wendy
I worked in the big hotel in Sandown, and a couple of hotels on the very seafront with two girls from Binstead, what fun we had, laughter and tears went together. I've lost touch with them but would love to hear what they are up to now and where they live. I remember Browns boating lake in Sandown, and one of the hotel managers on the front named Ken, and Itl the chipl who worked in the kitchen. The stadd were a very happy lot, Lydia and Wendy were very good friends to me, Wendy's mother worked in a shoe shop in Ryde, they lived opposite each other in a close at Binstead in council houses. I also took holidays at ...read more here
A memory of Binstead contributed by PATRICIA HAMILTON
Youthful Pranks (in Binstead)! 1958 - 1962
I am a 67 year old British citizen and have lived for over 40 years as a rock musician in Germany. I went to Ryde School in the 60s. After I left I was lonely living in London and used come back to the island most weekends - to my friends in - wait for it! of COURSE....in Binstead. I used to stay at the parents of my schoolfriend Ian Squire, Mr & Mrs Holmes-White. Ian went to Australia later. Sometimes I stayed at Major Carleton's villa where us boys used to slip out in the night and have wild parties near the beach with the Au Pair girls from the villa. My friend Brian Read from Ryde had an old ...read more here
A memory of Binstead contributed by Simon Hornsby
Extracts From Binstead & Isle Of Wight books
Situated on the high road between Cowes and Ryde, Binstead has views across
the Solent to Spithead. The nearby quarries - and much of Binstead’s villagers
must have worked in them when they were active - provided the stone for the
cathedrals at Chichester and Winchester.
An extract from from"Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album".
The area around Binstead, particularly the waste tips of the old
quarries, is a rich source of supply for the fossil-hunter. Freshwater
shell fossils, the fruits of ancient trees, and the fossilised remains of
mammals can all be discovered.
An extract from from"Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album".
The Victorian poet Horace Smith wrote these lines
on leaving the village: ‘Farewell, sweet Binstead!
Take a fond farewell/From one unused to sight of
woods and trees,/ Amid the strife of cities doomed
to dwell,/Yet roused to ecstasy by scenes like
these;/Who could for ever sit beneath thy trees,/
Inhaling fragrance from the flowery dell’.
An extract from from"Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album".
Passengers disembark for their holiday on the Isle of
Wight. Many return - as Queen Victoria did - year
after year. Exploring the dramatic coastline, pastoral
countryside and delightful towns and villages never fails
to make for a memorable holiday.
An extract from from"Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album".
The ferry from the mainland prepares to dock and unload its cargo of
motor vehicles and foot passengers. The vessel crosses from Lymington in
Hampshire, and offers one of the shortest passages across the Solent.
An extract from from"Isle of Wight Photographic Memories Pocket Album".






