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Abbots Bromley

Abbots Bromley photos (15 available)

Old photo of Abbots Bromley

Abbots Bromley maps (2 available)

Old map of Abbots Bromley

Abbots Bromley books (8 available)

Abbots Bromley memories

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You can also read memories of nearby places in Staffordshire below.

Staffordshire memories

My old School

Hill Ridware, the School c1955

My old school which myself and brother attended the good old days. This photo was taken from where I live now.
A memory of Hill Ridware contributed by John Poole

Chadwick family

Hill Ridware, the Chadwick Arms 1960

I am searching for a Charles & Hugo Mavesyn Chadwick.
Charles Chadwick died c1820 and Hugo Chadwick died in 1854.
I notice that the name of the public house in Hill Ridware is the Chadwick Arms.
Does anyone have any history of this pub and why it was given this name and of the Chadwicks of Mavesyn Ridware?
Betty Ashton (nee Chadwick)
A memory of Hill Ridware contributed by First name Last name

Ridware History Society

You may like to check out the Ridware History society site - www.kmaone.com/rhs -which has much about the history and photographs of the Ridwares in Staffordshire
A memory of Mavesyn Ridware contributed by Enid Manning

Colwich Football Team

My father, James E Bond, captained the Colwich Swifts for at least two seasons, and the team won the league in 1949. Jim played at Right Half. This memory was shared by Jim's friend Bill Fox.
A memory of Colwich contributed by Margaret Curtis

Extracts From Abbots Bromley & Staffordshire books

Abbots Bromley, the Market Place c1955

There are quite a few old, half-timbered buildings still extant in the village, but perhaps the most interesting is the old market house, which can be seen on the left of the picture. It is not the half-timbered building, but the open-sided structure.
An extract from from"Staffordshire Photographic Memories".

Abbots Bromley, the Market Place c1955

There are quite a few old, half-timbered buildings still extant in the village, but perhaps the most interesting is the old market house, which can be seen on the left of the picture. It is not the half-timbered building, but the open- sided structure.
An extract from from"Staffordshire Pocket Album".

Abbots Bromley, the Annual Horn Dance c1955

Every year, on the first Monday after the Sunday following 4 September, the Horn Dance is performed in Abbots Bromley. No one knows how old the dance is; it could easily predate the Norman Conquest, and its meaning is also lost to us. Ten dancers take part accompanied by two musicians. The dancers include a maid (Maid Marian), a jester, a man on a hobby-horse, a boy with a bow and arrow and six men wearing antlers.
An extract from from"Staffordshire Photographic Memories".

Abbots Bromley, the Annual Horn Dance c1955

The village gets its name from a Barton (or Berton), the old word for a rickyard.The village church of St James was remarkable for its time in that it was built all at once, and not over a couple of centuries. It was paid for by Dr John Taylor, a man of humble origins who rose through the ranks to become chaplain to Henry VIII and Master of the Rolls.The church was built in 1533.
An extract from from"Staffordshire Pocket Album".

Uttoxeter, High Street 1957

Gazing up the street past Wilks Teenage Fashions (left) with the Elkes Cafe above, we can see Barclays Bank. This was built in 1921 on the site of Huggins & Chambers, an ironmonger’s. The ironmonger’s sold Witchem’s firelighters among other products - these must have contributed to the conflagration when the building was burned to the ground in 1920.
An extract from from"Uttoxeter Living Memories".