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Goole

Goole photos (6 available)

Old photo of Goole

Goole maps (2 available)

Old map of Goole

Goole books (3 available)

Goole memories

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You can also read memories of nearby places in North Humberside below.

North Humberside memories

Willow Garth

My Grandparents Arthur and Gladys Gossop lived at Willow Garth, opposite the White Horse Pub.  Grandad bought it with his Army money.  He built a workshop, and began a business which included Wheelwright, Joiner and Contractor.  He made coffins and walked in funeral processions with his best top hat on.  He put piped water, WCs and a bathroom into the house, and did the same in Dad's house in York.  He had a bakelite telephone and always a car - first a little black one with orange indicators which stuck out to the side between the doors (one day the rain was coming through the roof when we went to the foundry and I saw the smith pour liquid metal into ...read more here
A memory of Gilberdyke contributed by Julia Cormack

The Cottages. Sandholme Road

Moved into Sandholme Road in 1954 from Howden. Father and grandfather bought The Cottages at auction and I lived there until going to college in 1970. My parents stayed there until 1983 when they moved into Laburnum Walk, where my mother still lives. Typical of many villages of the type, walk through it once and you have seen it twice. Living as I do now in Bedlington, Northumberland it is quite a way to visit but we get down when we can. I went to the old Gilberdyke primary as did my father and grandfather. (Ironically my father spent his last few years in the old school when it was turned into a nursing home). Passing the eleven plus meant I ...read more here
A memory of Gilberdyke contributed by Dave Cooper

98 & 100 High Street

Crowle, High Street c1960

These two shops in the High Street in Crowle were owned by my grandmother Rose Raper. They were handed down to my father and aunt. My dad Raymond Raper had the grocers shop at number 98 and we lived above the shop until I was ten years old in 1963. My dad continued to work in the shop until his retirement in 1984.
The shop at 100 was owned by my aunt Winnie Underwood. She had a drapery shop and her husband ran the post office at the back of the premises.
A memory of Crowle contributed by Rachel Ross

Stephenson's shop

Holme-On-Spalding-Moor, Station Corner c1955

In 1939 this shop was owned by Mr and Mrs Hodgson. They were relatives of Geoff Foster who still lives in the village. I last made a purchase from Annie Hodgson in 1948. I last saw the Hodgsons in 1952 on returning from service in Malaya. I love Holme and still make regular visits.
A memory of Holme-On-Spalding-Moor contributed by Peter Wiles

Extracts From Goole & North Humberside books

Goole, Pasture Road c1955

Pasture Road has been recently re-paved, but it is still the location for many of the local retail businesses. In recent years it has held highly successful Christmas events which see the road closed to traffic and a street fair held.
An extract from from"Humberside Pocket Album".

Goole, the Docks c1955

The port has seen many changes since its beginnings in the mid 1800s. As an inland port, situated at the centre of the UK, it is an ideal import/export point for Europe and the rest of the world.
An extract from from"Humberside Pocket Album".

Goole, Market Centre c1955

The Clock Tower is a modern structure built in 1945 to commemorate the end of the war; to the rear is the Victorian Market Hall. It is nice to see the Palace open as a real cinema before the onset of the multi-screen visual supermarkets.
An extract from from"Humberside Pocket Album".

Launceston, Greystone Bridge c1875

Greystone Bridge is ‘the fairest bridge in the two shires it links together’, according to Charles Henderson and Henry Coates in ‘Old Cornish Bridges and Streams’. Today it carries the A384 to Tavistock.
An extract from from"Hull Town and City Memories".

Launceston, the Chain Bridge 1906

‘Chain Bridge was a great attraction for me and my friends. We always built a hut in the woods — and would like to have slept there, but weren’t allowed to. We cooked anything cookable we could get hold of, pinching potatoes and turnips from fields on the way there, and apples from orchards. We used to build bridges from island to island or spend hours killing vipers which abounded in a limestone tip heap. Daft we were; why we weren’t bitten I don’t know. Occasionally we made 6d by bringing home a basket of blackberries or elderberries for someone. Such was the summer holiday of a working-class boy’. Mr Cecil Cole, talking of his childhood in the early years of the 20th century, quoted in Arthur Bate Venning and Arthur Wills’ book ‘Yesterday’s Town’.
An extract from from"Hull Town and City Memories".