Ewelme
Ewelme maps (2 available)
Map of Oxfordshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
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Ewelme books (11 available)
Ewelme memories
Ewelme School 1957
I am Mick Phillips and I was at Ewelme School in 1957. Mr Coles was the headmaster and Miss Walker was my class teacher. We were 9 and 10 year olds in the upstairs room and the younger children were taught downstairs by a Miss Lewis, who got married around that time to someone from RAF Benson.
I remember Miss Walker being presented with some flowers at assembly one morning by Mr Coles to mark her 25th year at the school. She was a rather serious Irish lady in her fifties who rapped my knuckles for not understanding fractions and read to us from Wind in the Willows on Friday afternoon. Although probably no record exists, the BBC came to the ...read more here
Contributed by mick phillips
Oxfordshire memories
Ewelme School 1957
I am Mick Phillips and I was at Ewelme School in 1957. Mr Coles was the headmaster and Miss Walker was my class teacher. We were 9 and 10 year olds in the upstairs room and the younger children were taught downstairs by a Miss Lewis, who got married around that time to someone from RAF Benson.
I remember Miss Walker being presented with some flowers at assembly one morning by Mr Coles to mark her 25th year at the school. She was a rather serious Irish lady in her fifties who rapped my knuckles for not understanding fractions and read to us from Wind in the Willows on Friday afternoon. Although probably no record exists, the BBC came to the ...read more here
A memory of Ewelme contributed by mick phillips
Old caravan field near Benson?
My husband was at RAF Benson in 1969. We got married in November, but could not find any accommodation around the airfield. In desperation we rented a tiny caravan in a farmer's field south of the airfield. There was no running water and the one outside tap tended to freeze in winter. The few caravans were managed by an elderly couple - the old lady I remember vividly, as she had long straggly grey hair and always wore the same outfit: big baggy sweater over a kilt over blue jeans and wellingtons! To get to Benson you came out of the caravan field, turned left and at the end of this lane was a pub, ...read more here
A memory of Benson contributed by Jeanette Clarke
Memories of Benson
My memories of Benson started in 1946/7 when we moved to Sunnyside, which in those days did not have the recreation field. Nor did the village have street lighting apart from a couple in the High Street, one of which was on the wall of Franklin's Farm. The shops in those days were Slaughters Stores, High Street & Chamberlains Stores, Castle Square. There were 2 butchers in High Street (Wm. Lee & the other I can't remember the name), Stan Blisset had the hairdressers next to Slaughters Stores. Tom Shotton was the postmaster. Bill Aldridge ran the greengrocers shop, opposite Crown Hotel, and was later taken over by Wm Turner. Gurneys Garage was a small unit in Chapel Lane. My stepfather, ...read more here
A memory of Benson contributed by John WEBB
Extracts From Ewelme & Oxfordshire books
This 1893 view of the Catherine Wheel, an inn by 1499, shows
it just before it took over the two Georgian brick houses beyond.
On the right, the street still awaits the out-of-scale London and
Counties bank, erected in 1892.
An extract from from"Henley-on-Thames Town and City Memories".
All three views taken by the Frith photographer in 1899 are south
of the Regatta course, which from 1886 had its finishing line near
Phyllis Court. In the first view (right) we are looking towards the
bridge from south Riverside and the second (bottom right) was
taken from the bridge itself. The third (bottom left) was taken
looking along Riverside north with the gardens of the Red Lion
on the right; this was a most exclusive seating area, but it has since
been lost to road improvements. In this view we see the black
poplars on the Berkshire bank which replaced the late 18th-century
ones planted by Field Marshal Conway.
An extract from from"Henley-on-Thames Town and City Memories".
Pigot and Co’s National Commercial Directory, published in
1830, gives an interesting snapshot of the town just before its rapid
decline (the building of the Great Western Railway killed both the
commercial river trade and the coach trade at one fell swoop as
a result of by-passing Henley). ‘Henley, a market town, and one
of the neatest, cleanest, and most respectable in the County ... is
exceedingly pleasantly situated on the west side of the river Thames’.
Commenting on the town’s appearance, the Directory says that
‘its whole appearance [is] indicating recent improvements, and
bearing evidence of the good taste of its inhabitants. The town hall
is a considerable ornament to the town, and the market-house is a
commodious and well constructed building’. It also describes the
town’s then economic base: ‘a considerable trade is carried on from
hence to London, in corn, malt, flour and timber; there is also a
considerable manufactory for silk, and another near the town for
paper. The inns here are respectable and comfortable; the principal
commercial house is the White Hart’.
An extract from from"Henley-on-Thames Town and City Memories".
The reference to the Town Hall is to the one erected in 1795
to the designs of Alderman Bradshaw to replace the earlier one he
demolished. The town also acquired that other symbol of Georgian
respectability and status: Assembly Rooms, in Bell Street.
This introductory chapter can only skim the surface to set the
scene for what could be termed the photographic portrait of the
town contained in the next five chapters. I have not mentioned the
Civil War or local politics at all - these belong in other books; but
I hope I have indicated that the town seen in the Frith views has
much of its earlier framework or skeleton intact, with Georgian and
Victorian facades jostling with or concealing Tudor or earlier timber-
framed houses. This was a working town that grew up, like Marlow,
fed by the river trade that transported the goods and produce of the
hinterland, mainly to London. It had small houses too, and Friday
Street was where the poorer tradesmen and labourers lived.
However, by 1847 James Thorn could write in ‘Rambles by
Rivers’ that ‘there are several large inns, to which was formerly a
considerable posting trade attached, but it was almost destroyed by
the railway’. The railway had, of course, missed the town, which was
hardly surprising given its hilly surroundings. This decline after the
railway had destroyed its river trade as well as the coaching trade led
the town to look elsewhere for survival.
When a branch line finally arrived in 1857, Henley developed
both as a commuter town and as a leisure one. Henley was ahead in
that game - its Regatta was a master-stroke, for it was founded by the
citizens well before the great late Victorian and Edwardian boating
boom; a boom depicted so wonderfully in Jerome K Jerome’s ‘Three
Men in a Boat’ published in 1889. Henley had latched on to the
newly-fashionable sport of rowing; this preceded the later Victorian
boom, which also enthused the lower middle classes with their
increased leisure and spending money. Its first coup was the very
first Oxford and Cambridge boat race, held at Henley in 1829.
Thus a river port with the piles of grain along its wharves, depicted
in Ward’s 1835 painting ‘A View of Henley Bridge’, was transformed
by the fashionable rowing fraternity and by an event that became a
key event in the social calendar: the Henley Royal Regatta. Leisure,
tourism and shopping replaced commerce, and the town revived; the
railway station serviced the Regatta and that new phenomenon, the
middle class commuter who travelled daily to London.
An extract from from"Henley-on-Thames Town and City Memories".
These views show each end of the bridge - two were taken in 1890.
Photograph looks from the Berkshire side, from the balcony of the
Carpenter’s Arms landing stage towards its rival, The Angel, whose
tall 18th-century bay-windowed river elevation and riverside terrace
are a well-known and very popular landmark; the Angel is perhaps
the most photographed building in Henley. The other two views
show the Carpenters Arms landing stage and boathouse, which in
1955 were rented to J G Meakes Ltd. The Carpenters Arms inn
was built in 1714, but it was demolished in 1984 to make way for
the Henley Royal Regatta headquarters.
An extract from from"Henley-on-Thames Town and City Memories".





