Milton Malsor
Milton Malsor photos (9 available)
Milton Malsor maps (2 available)
Map of Northamptonshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Northamptonshire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Milton Malsor books (14 available)
Daventry Living Memories
Hardback
Daventry Living Memories
Paperback
Wellingborough Living Memories
Paperback
- 3 photos on Milton Malsor appear in 3 Frith books - View photos of Milton Malsor
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Milton Malsor and Northamptonshire
Milton Malsor memories
Be the first to add a memory of Milton Malsor.
You can also read memories of nearby places in Northamptonshire below.
Northamptonshire memories
Car project.
The Morris car depicted in the photograph was overhauled and bodied by my late father, Arthur Parker, in 1951-2. He had removed the body from a c1937 Morris 8 van, overhauled the mechanics and the chassis, and built from scratch a new shooting brake style body. As a 7-year old I was thrilled to be able to help with the work and immensely proud of the result. Unfortunately, when father came to register the car the authorities decided to demand the full purchase tax which hadn't been levied on the original pre-war commercial vehicle. This sum, in the hard times of the early 1950s, was difficult to find and the Morris sadly had to be sold to ...read more here
A memory of Duston contributed by Mr C Parker
Memories of War - The Forgotten Casualties (1) - by Patricia Bolter
I am entering these memories on behalf of my mother in law - Patricia Ross (nee Bolter)
Running to meet Dad, just a young man, in uniform for the first time coming home to show us in pride. Providing for the family had been difficult, even tried sweeping snow. I have listened to "The Little Boy That Santa Clause Forgot", could only cry "I don't want my Dad to go away" but what does a 4 year old really understand. We had watched Dad and Uncles dig a shelter in our yard and played getting into it quickly, it was dark and damp. Mum fell down the steps but we were "SAFE. Save The Children? What have we learned? Fetching ...read more here
A memory of Northampton contributed by Jane Ross
when young
goint to the Savoy Cinema to see and hear the Compton Organ, the cinema has now been bought by thr Jesus people & restored to its 1930,s decoration.
the name of Alan Ashton rings a bell, was he conected to the Savoy/ABC cinema years ago.
the town has altered quite a lot since those days of the 1940/50,s not as i like it these days.
i am in my late years now (75) but love the past.
A memory of Northampton contributed by Brian Coward
great grandmother
My great grandmother was born in Great Houghton in 1868. She married Charles Neville and moved to Swanscombe in Kent. She had four children at the time of the 1901 census, the eldest of whom was nine.
All I know is that her name was Lizzie! I need to do some research to find her maiden name and to see if any relatives of "Lizzie" live in the area.
I now live 20 miles from Great Houghton, having been born in Dartford, Kent. She and I have crossed paths!
A memory of Great Houghton contributed by linda waddilove
Extracts From Milton Malsor & Northamptonshire books
Beyond Blisworth and virtually within earshot of the M1 (which opened in the late 1950s) Milton Malsor survives proximity to Northampton remarkably well. A compact village with concentric circles of winding, intimate lanes, the church has a surprisingly timeless appearance with the field in the foreground used for village fetes, including the 2002 Golden Jubilee fete. In this view the curious stumpy 14th-century steeple sits atop a 13th-century tower.
An extract from from"Northamptonshire Living Memories".
Milton Malsor is a charming, typically English village to the south of Northampton and the M1. This picture shows the village post office, delightfully housed in a picturesque thatched cottage. Most of Milton Malsor’s buildings date from the 17th and 18th centuries. Opposite the post office is a classic Morris estate car, a familiar sight in the 1950s and 60s.
An extract from from"Northamptonshire Photographic Memories".
This view is in the heart of the village, where Green Street meets the High Street at a small green with a 1920s War Memorial cross. This is a scene of contrasts, featuring Manor Cottage, an 18th-century thatched stone-built house, and the dull 1960s house to the left. The bus shelter remains, but re-roofed in sheet metal.
An extract from from"Northamptonshire Living Memories".
The buildings on the left, the west side of the Market Place, mostly survive today, apart from the two at
the far left. Unlike a French market square, the south and west side of Northampton’s market place in
particular have a delightful informality and physical variety, with no building the same as its neighbour.
An extract from from"Northampton Town and City Memories".
10th-century Anglo-Saxon church tower at Earls Barton. The place also had a Norman earthwork castle, a motte and bailey type;
in later years it was a boot and shoe making town, one of several that thrived around Northampton.
An extract from from"Northampton Town and City Memories".






