Alrewas
Alrewas maps (2 available)
Map of Staffordshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Staffordshire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Alrewas books (7 available)
- 1 photos on Alrewas appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Alrewas
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Alrewas and Staffordshire
Alrewas memories
childhood
Having just stumbled across this website and viewed the photographs, I immediately went into nostalgia mode. I was born in Alrewas in 1938 in one of the small cottages in Main Street just down from Mansell's bridge, and then moved to The Old School House in Park Road the following year, where I spent the next 12 years. I have many memories of the village as it was in the 1940's and early 1950's, ranging from place names , shops, farms, business premises, and people. I can still recall most of my pals who grew up with me during this austere period during , and immediately after the War, and have many happy memories, and understandably a few unhappy ones. It ...read more here
Contributed by anthony venables
Dickinson's shop
It was always a real pleasure to pop into this old fashioned shop for any supplies and talk to Mrs D!
Contributed by frank clarke
Staffordshire memories
childhood
Having just stumbled across this website and viewed the photographs, I immediately went into nostalgia mode. I was born in Alrewas in 1938 in one of the small cottages in Main Street just down from Mansell's bridge, and then moved to The Old School House in Park Road the following year, where I spent the next 12 years. I have many memories of the village as it was in the 1940's and early 1950's, ranging from place names , shops, farms, business premises, and people. I can still recall most of my pals who grew up with me during this austere period during , and immediately after the War, and have many happy memories, and understandably a few unhappy ones. It ...read more here
A memory of Alrewas contributed by anthony venables
Dickinson's shop
It was always a real pleasure to pop into this old fashioned shop for any supplies and talk to Mrs D!
A memory of Alrewas contributed by frank clarke
Extracts From Alrewas & Staffordshire books
This pleasant village on the Trent & Mersey Canal was a popular stop-off point for old boatmen: the pubs in the village were the main attraction. The church is mainly 13th- and 14th-century. The Austin A40 and Standard 10 cars on the left are a reminder of a more gentle motoring age.
An extract from from"Canals and Waterways".
Here we see the black
and white cottages of
‘Churchside’ with their
thatched roofs, and
the tower of All Saints’,
dating from the 14th
century. The lych gate is
still there today, although
trees have now obscured
this view of the cottages.
An extract from from"Down the Trent Photographic Memories".
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".
The Old Talbot was built in 1527,
and is reputed to be the oldest
building in Uttoxeter. It survived
two fires which badly damaged the
town in 1596 and 1672. The coat
of arms on the inn sign depicts
its name: a talbot, or hound, was
the crest of the Talbots, Earls of
Shrewsbury. Recent renovations
have revealed more of the timber-
framed structure.
An extract from from"Uttoxeter Living Memories".
In 1642 Charles I was confronted on the approach to
the bridge by a contingent of Staffordshire residents
asking him to come to terms with Parliament. He
ignored their pleas. The new A50 bypass has meant
that the bridge is now an attractive stop on the
Staffordshire Way.
An extract from from"Uttoxeter Living Memories".






