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Sleaford

Sleaford photos (26 available)

Old photo of Sleaford

Sleaford maps (2 available)

Old map of Sleaford

Sleaford books (15 available)

Sleaford memories

fun times

i have fond memories of sleaford staying with my grand parents on st giles avenue , going to the wreck to play going swimming and best of all going to the market to see all the live stock .My dad would tell is all what he got up too as a child where he lived as a boy,jubilee road i think (ken gash). i have an old photo of my great grandad out side a public house in sleaford would love to know where about it is or if its still there
Contributed by becky wilson

Lincolnshire memories

fun times

i have fond memories of sleaford staying with my grand parents on st giles avenue , going to the wreck to play going swimming and best of all going to the market to see all the live stock .My dad would tell is all what he got up too as a child where he lived as a boy,jubilee road i think (ken gash). i have an old photo of my great grandad out side a public house in sleaford would love to know where about it is or if its still there
A memory of Sleaford contributed by becky wilson

The owner of Culverthorpe

Please contact me on 07956522484 if you want any memories.
A memory of contributed by First name Last name

Boyhood in Navenby

Navenby, High Street c1965

This is the village where I was born and grew up. The first shop on the right was my Dad's, a Butcher. This was next to Welbourn's the baker. The other side of Tenters Lane was another Bakers, Marshall's.
The village school then was in Church Lane next to the church and the teachers were Miss True, Mr Wright, Miss Milner, and Mr Powley, the Head. I went to this school and so did my Dad. I believe Mr Powley taught him too.
A memory of Navenby contributed by Graham Dawson

Extracts From Sleaford & Lincolnshire books

Sleaford, Monument c1950

Sleaford has fragments of a castle, built by Alexander, the princely Bishop of Lincoln, in the 1120s, but its function as a market town for north Kesteven is undimmed. This view looks north along South Gate past the extraordinarily grandiose statue in its towering medieval-style spired canopy to a 19th-century MP, Henry Handley, which dates from 1850.
An extract from from"Lincolnshire Pocket Album".

Sleaford, Monument c1950

Sleaford has fragments of a castle, built by Alexander, the princely Bishop of Lincoln, in the 1120s, but its function as a market town for north Kesteven is undimmed. This view looks north along South Gate past the extraordinarily grandiose statue in its towering medieval-style spired canopy to a 19th-century MP, Henry Handley, which dates from 1850.
An extract from from"Lincolnshire Photographic Memories".

Sleaford, Southgate c1950

Moving north, just beyond the Handley Memorial, and heading for the Market Place, we see buildings mostly from the late 18th- and 19th-century phase of Sleaford’s prosperity, with the castellated house on the corner of Handley Street, dated 1907, as its last gasp. To the south of the railway are the former Maltings, built in the 1890s on a colossal scale, and an industrial monument to one of Sleaford’s major industries.
An extract from from"Lincolnshire Photographic Memories".

Sleaford, Northgate c1950

At the end of South Gate is the Market Place, which has on its east side one of Lincolnshire’s finest churches. Here, where South Gate meets North Gate, are the town’s finest commercial buildings, such as the HSBC bank of 1903 on the left and the Sessions House of 1830 in Gothick style with a pointed arched ground arcade.
An extract from from"Lincolnshire Photographic Memories".

Sleaford, West Banks c1955

Sleaford is built on the banks of the River Slea which splits into two branches no more than streams in size. This view looks east along West Banks, with its numerous small bridges, to the mainly late Victorian artisan cottages (some are dated 1901). To the south are further artisan terraces and short side streets. The early 19th-century cottages on the left were lost in the 1960s.
An extract from from"Lincolnshire Photographic Memories".