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Market Drayton

Market Drayton photos (94 available)

Old photo of Market Drayton

Market Drayton maps (2 available)

Old map of Market Drayton

Market Drayton books (5 available)

Market Drayton memories

RAF Tern Hill and St Joseph's College

From 1946 till 1951 we lived at RAF Tern Hill and every day my brother and I travelled by bus (Butters Bus Company as I remember!). We were dropped off near the lovely ivy-covered hotel in the square, and walked down the hill past the swimming pool then uphill to St Joseph's College. We were always impressed by the thought of Clive of India climbing that church tower - we looked at it once but decided not to try it. Tern Hill airfield was a paradise for adventurous little boys, and I never forgot the rasping sound of the engines of the Harvard trainers.
The college in Pell Wall Hall was also wonderful, with the ground filled with beech trees and ...read more here
Contributed by kevin kelly

Betton in the 1940s-50s

Market Drayton, Betton House 1899

I remember Ramsdons living at Betton House in the 1940s - 50s.  I myself lived at Moss Lane Farm, Betton from 1939 to 1959.  My fathers name was Arthur Holland.  I also remember delivering the newspapers to Betton House and that there were several small yapping dogs.  I think after that Tellwrights lived at Betton House.  Brenda Bailey nee Holland.
Contributed by First Name Last Name

betton hall

Market Drayton, Betton Hall 1899

I was looking at the photo of Betton Hall and I think my aunty used to live there, Joyce Allen.
Contributed by linda moss

National Service at Buntingdale Hall

Market Drayton, Buntingsdale Hall 1899

Having had basic training at RAF Hednesford I was then posted to Buntingsdale Hall Headquarters Technical Training Command to spend the remainder of my two years National Service in the signals section. I recall that the commissioned ranks outnumbered the non-commissioned ranks at that time. This was an idylic location with an 18th-century baronial hall complete with lake etc.
When it was learned that I had some ability at piano playing, I was regularly asked to provide background music on the officer's 'dining in nights' and my reward comprised a very enjoyable supper.
Flight Lieutenant 'Count' Badini, ADC to the Air Chief Marshall (Air Officer Commanding), was also officer i/c Signals and he, when aware that I could draw, commissioned ...read more here
Contributed by Lawrence Law

Buntingsdale Hall and Farcroft.

Market Drayton, Buntingsdale Hall 1899

My first posting as as an L.A.C. Chef in the R.A.F. was to 22 Group H.Q. at the hall in May 1953. I was eighteen at the time and was to become chef to A.V.M. Merton in his residence, Farcroft in Market Drayton.
I reported to the guardroom and was then whisked up to meet the A.V.M. by his P.A. F/Lt. Jan Badini who I was told was a Polish Count. I think he must have been as he later told us about hunting wolves on his estate in Poland before the war.
I was later to live in Farcroft cooking for the A.V.M., his wife known to us as 'Agie' (behind her back), Cpl Davis, Pete Redcar and another batman ...read more here
Contributed by Jamie Smith

Mid-1948 to Mid-August 1949

Market Drayton, Buntingsdale Hall 1899

In mid-1948 my RAF posting was to Buntingsdale Hall. Our quarters were one of two occupied Nissen huts where RAF 22 Group communications flight was housed. At first our aircraft occupied a hanger on the Stoke side of the airfield. When a maintenace unit required that hanger we relocated to the Tern Hill side of the airfield, home to the flying training school equiped with Harvard aircraft.
The communications flight was used by Air Marshalls (and associated ranks) to ferry them to RAF 22 group locations, usually in Great Britain and Northern Island.
Buntingsdale Hall was used by us for meals, where a Warrant Officer was in charge.
At Buntigsdale Hall the commanding officer was a Flight lieutenant, nicknamed Tojo.
read more here
Contributed by Les Winn

Lock keepers at Tyrley.

Market Drayton, Tyrley Locks 1911

My great grandfather worked as a lock keeper at Tyrley at the time of my grandmother's birth in 1883.  My great grandfather named William Nixon married an Elizabeth Timmis whose father and brothers also worked as lock keepers at Tyrley and lived there.  My grandmother Eva Nixon married Henry Thacker and he too lived near Tyrley and worked as a 'lengthsman' on the canal.
Contributed by Mrs CA Hayes

Extracts From Market Drayton & Shropshire books

Market Drayton, Newport Road 1898

Local histories describe Robert Clive as a young tearaway, and stories of him abound. He ran a protection racket, for example, and with his young gang of hooligans dammed a stream through the town so that it flooded the shop of a butcher who would not pay him protection money - or so the story goes!
An extract from from"Shropshire Photographic Memories".

Market Drayton, from the South 1898

Market Drayton stands on a hill-top site overlooking the River Tern, which flows in the foreground of this photograph, and the settlement probably originated in prehistoric times. In medieval times it was a market town owned by Combermere Abbey, a Cistercian abbey on the Cheshire border.
An extract from from"Shropshire Photographic Memories".

Market Drayton, Shropshire Street 1898

It was in Shropshire Street that Roland Lateward lived at the end of the 1700s. He is reputed to have been the first gingerbread baker in the town. Even today, gingerbread is still produced here.
An extract from from"Shropshire Photographic Memories".

Market Drayton, Shropshire Street 1898

Shropshire towns have long had a reputation for their displays of hanging baskets and window boxes, a fashion that the rest of the country seems only recently to have followed. Notice the rusticated window boxes on the cottage here.
An extract from from"Shropshire Photographic Memories".

Market Drayton, Adderley Hall 1898

Adderley was the scene of a feud between two local families, the Corbets and the Needhams, over fox-hunting. The Needhams thought it was a bloodthirsty sport and refused to allow the Corbets to hunt over their lands; arguments between the two families continued for years.
An extract from from"Shropshire Photographic Memories".