Anchorsholme
Anchorsholme maps (1 available)
Anchorsholme photos (none available)
Anchorsholme books (14 available)
Anchorsholme memories
Be the first to add a memory of Anchorsholme.
You can also read memories of nearby places in Norfolk below.
Norfolk memories
Uncle John
My Grand parents lived in Hunsett Mill House around 1920-1930, Grandad, whilst I never knew him they had the house as a tied cottage as part of his job on the farm. He had to keep the dykes clear, and that was as least part of the funtion of the Mill. The child in the row boat is my Uncle John who died three of four years ago. He used to stop the cabin cruisers and offer them a cup of tea and Granny had to stop what she was doing and make it for his new friends.
A memory of The Broads contributed by Eileen Austin
last season on queen of the broads
I was one of the very last crew members of the queen of the broads before she was scrapped and was very sad when she was scrapped in lake lothing oulton broad suffolk
A memory of The Broads contributed by richard cox
Cox's Boat Yard
This photo shows Cox's boatyard in late autumn not long after the boat shed on the left had been built. The shed had been part of a wartime camp some where in East Anglia and had been re-erected by the Cox brothers, Lewis and Sonny, complete with American pinups.
A memory of The Broads contributed by John Hopthrow
Reedham orphanage
My father died just before I was born and my mother had to put my brother and I into Reedham orphanage. I was still on a potty as I remember complaining that I was now old enough to go on the toilet and have some privacy. I remember a row of potties along a wall oposite the tiny 'grown up' toilets that had curtains not doors. I remember a little baby called Paula being shown to us. She was a black girl and so sweet and pretty.
I was at the orphanage for 2 or 3 years and then my mother (against the odds) got a council house in Plymouth and we joined her and my older sister.
I ...read more here
A memory of Purley contributed by Kathryn Jackson
Extracts From Anchorsholme & Norfolk books
Looking west along the High Street, we see buildings which are characteristic of North Norfolk: flints set in mortar, with brick facings.
An extract from from"East Anglia Pocket Album".
Looking west along the High Street, we see buildings which are characteristic of North Norfolk: flints set in mortar, with brick facings.
An extract from from"East Anglia Pocket Album".
Here, holidaymakers take a relaxing walk. The gardens embellish the entrance to Wellington Pier, and had been bought at a knockdown price from Torquay, where they had originally been sited from 1878 to 1881.
An extract from from"East Anglia Pocket Album".
Here, holidaymakers take a relaxing walk. The gardens embellish the entrance to Wellington Pier, and had been bought at a knockdown price from Torquay, where they had originally been sited from 1878 to 1881.
An extract from from"East Anglia Pocket Album".
At this time, close to the end of the Victorian era, staying fully clothed on the beach was very much the norm, with sand castles and donkey rides the prime amusements for the children; the adults relax in deck chairs, and shelter from the wind behind umbrellas. Lowestoft can be bracing any time of year...
An extract from from"East Anglia Pocket Album".






