The Francis Frith Collection.
You are here: Home > Explore your past > England > Staffordshire > Biddulph
Save 50-70% on Prestige coffee-table books!

Biddulph

Biddulph photos (27 available)

Old photo of Biddulph

Biddulph maps (2 available)

Old map of Biddulph

Biddulph books (7 available)

Biddulph memories

Would You Believe It

Biddulph, High Street c1955

The young man on the outside of the pavement is me, the group standing in the distance are family members and the two on my right are demanding to know where I am going, as it happened I was going to see my Gran.

Did not know who the kids were and still don't but if you look at the picture my fists are clenched I was ready for a fight but they backed off, I still walk with clenched fists to this day!

If you took a picture in the same place today it would look very much the same, todays pictures would be in colour but then that is how we saw it anyway.

Best Regards ...read more here
Contributed by David Bailey

Staffordshire memories

Would You Believe It

Biddulph, High Street c1955

The young man on the outside of the pavement is me, the group standing in the distance are family members and the two on my right are demanding to know where I am going, as it happened I was going to see my Gran.

Did not know who the kids were and still don't but if you look at the picture my fists are clenched I was ready for a fight but they backed off, I still walk with clenched fists to this day!

If you took a picture in the same place today it would look very much the same, todays pictures would be in colour but then that is how we saw it anyway.

Best Regards ...read more here
A memory of Biddulph contributed by David Bailey

Amenities, the good old days, and they were!

Brown Edge was a brillant place to live, and I have fond memories of the village.
Perhaps in my youth I did not really appreciate what I had, the village store (Keiths), the butchers, Harrisons and Sammy Bratts., cake shop, Mountfords chip shop., the working mens club, the Holy Bush, the Lump of Coal and the Roebuck, what a selection and all thriving businesses, together with Turners buses, and of course the local youth clubs, Sandy Lane and Brown Edge Schools, just great.
As children we had a great time as we would go to the fields and woods to play, never damaging anything, it was safe and we would go for the day on our main school holidays, just enjoying ...read more here
A memory of Brown Edge contributed by Linda Mitchell

All uphill

Kidsgrove, Mow Cop Castle c1965

Our Dad used to take us for a walk up to Mow Cop Castle on a sunny Sunday. We would set off from Talke with our bottle of pop and a jam butty and walk along the canal for a while then through the lanes in Scholar Green past the Three Horseshoes then up the steepest hill to the Castle. We would sit inside the round window at the front and try to see our house in Talke on the other side of the valley. We could see so much on a clear day but never really understood what we were looking at - The welsh Mountains were part of the view and we were always trying to spot the beach ...read more here
A memory of Kidsgrove contributed by Tina Stanyer

Extracts From Biddulph & Staffordshire books

Biddulph, the Grange 1902

Biddulph Grange stands amid the magnificent gardens laid out by one of the great 19th century horticulturists, James Bateman. Bateman was also responsible for laying out the Arboretum at Derby, the first public park in England. The Grange later became a children’s hospital.
An extract from from"Staffordshire Photographic Memories".

Biddulph, the Grange 1902

Biddulph Grange stands amid the magnificent gardens laid out by one of the great 19th-century horticulturists, James Bateman. Bateman was also responsible for laying out the Arboretum at Derby, the first public park in England.The Grange later became a children’s hospital.
An extract from from"Staffordshire Pocket Album".

Biddulph, the Grange 1902

This view shows the Victorian mansion and one of the more conventional parts of its fasci- nating gardens.
An extract from from"Congleton Town and City Memories".

Biddulph, High Street and War Memorial c1955

In an earlier conflict John Bowyer, who was baptized at Biddulph in 1623, raised a company of foot for the Parliamentary army, and served with distinction at Hopton Heath. He was later appointed Governor of Leek and authorized to raise two Troops of Horse and to bring his company up to full regimental strength.
An extract from from"Staffordshire Photographic Memories".

Biddulph, High Street c1955

At this time boys were often in their teens before they got a pair of long trousers. Jeans were unheard of, and the design of children’s clothes had hardly changed for thirty years. The three boys on the left could have stepped straight out of the late 1920s. Jeans did not become readily available until around 1960, when they could be bought for as little as 7s 6d a pair.
An extract from from"Staffordshire Photographic Memories".