Pave Lane
Pave Lane maps (2 available)
Map of Shropshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Shropshire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Pave Lane photos (none available)
We have no photos of Pave Lane,although these nearby locations do:Pave Lane books (4 available)
Ludlow Photographic Memories
Paperback
Shrewsbury Photographic Memories
Paperback
Pave Lane memories
Be the first to add a memory of Pave Lane.
You can also read memories of nearby places in Shropshire below.
Shropshire memories
Family connections.
My grandfather, William Simpsom Bruchshaw, is the man coming out of the greenhouse with the plant in his hand. He was head gardener to Mr Munro Walker until Mr Walker died. My grandfather's youngest brother, Henry, was farm manager on the estate. While at Pell Wall, my grandfather experimented in growing tomatoes on potatoes in about 1908 I think. We still have the photos in the family. After he left Pell Wall my grandfather lived in Little Drayton. He died aged 91 in 1952.
A memory of Pell Wall contributed by KD Hill
Lock keepers at Tyrley.
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.
A memory of Market Drayton contributed by Mrs CA Hayes
Ethel May Tantrum
My husband's Grandmother, Ethel May Tantrum, was born in Craven Arms in 1885, but by 1891 was living in Elms Cottage, Little Stretton. In 1910, she married Harold Ezard and in 1924 she died at White Birches Cottage, Little Stretton. Their son, Harold, was born in Little Stretton, but we are not sure where (possibly White Birches Cottage?) and we would love to hear from anyone who could help us find out more about the Tantrums and the Ezards of Little Stretton.
We recently visited Little Stretton, by chance, with some friends and found it a fascinating place and plan to return in the future.
A memory of Little Stretton contributed by Judith Ezard
John Weaver Lilleshall sculptor
John Weaver is shown as being a stonemason on the 1827 Lilleshall baptism certificate of his son Alfred Weaver.
A family anecdote says that John Weaver took commissions for monumental sculptures and that after a statue of a horse and rider was unveiled it was noticed that he had omitted the girth straps for the saddle. This caused considerable ridicule from others and eventually depressed him so much that he took his own life by shooting himself.
I have long wondered if somewhere in or near Lilleshall there is such a statue?
Dr Paul Weaver, 23 Waddell Rd. Palmyra. Western Australia. pweaver@westnet.com.au (August 2006)
A memory of Lilleshall contributed by Paul Weaver
Extracts From Pave Lane & Shropshire books
This beautiful house, still
privately owned, was built in
1760 and is little changed,
although the ivy that covers
the building here has now
been removed.
An extract from from"Shropshire Living Memories".
Burford sits right on the county boundary with Herefordshire - the boundary is defined by the River Teme at this point. The
café pictured here is now a private house beside the main road to Tenbury Wells. The lake in the foreground is a nature
reserve, and it sits within the grounds of Burford House - this is now also the home of the National Clematis Collection.
An extract from from"Shropshire Living Memories".
Cleobury, pronounced
Clibbery, was once a
stronghold of the powerful
Mortimer family; they also
owned castles in, for
example, Ludlow, Wigmore
and Chirk. One member of
the family even became
King of England - Edward IV.
The town also claims to be
the birthplace of the 14th-
century poet William
Langland, although it has to
be said that Ledbury and
Great Malvern make the
same claim.
An extract from from"Shropshire Living Memories".
This is the view as one comes into the town from the west. The road on the right, Vaughan Road, now leads into an estate
with a number of new houses. Otherwise, although the cars are a clue to when the picture was taken, the view looks very
much the same today. Notice the slight bend in the line of the steeple in the distance.
An extract from from"Shropshire Living Memories".
This remote barren countryside would seem to be very uninviting. However, people have always lived here, and the hillside is
covered with the remains of bell pits - ancient open-cast mines where people have dug for coal from the 13th century. This view
shows the main road that links Ludlow with Cleobury Mortimer - it is a spectacular drive, with wonderful views to the south.
An extract from from"Shropshire Living Memories".





