Dunsfold
Dunsfold maps (2 available)
Dunsfold books (32 available)
Camberley Town Walk Guide
Paperback
Redhill to Reigate Photographic Memories
Paperback
Camberley Pocket Album
Paperback
- 2 photos on Dunsfold appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Dunsfold
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Dunsfold and Surrey
Dunsfold memories
My Birth place
I was born on the 23rd March 1947 in my grandparents' home, Hope Cottage to the right of the Sun Inn and next to Lloyds Bank. Nurse Caines was in attendance. To the left of the Sun Inn lived Lord King ex chairman of British Airways. In front of the pub was a pond that was filled in when the village went onto main drainage. The village boasted six shops, two petrol pumps, a bank, two pubs, a social club, village hall, barbers, allotments, infant school, church, seven ponds, seven dairy herds, cricket and football teams, hotel and Fire Station (still going today run by part time firemen). Sadly many are now gone. The telephone exchange was the first automated exchange ...read more here
Contributed by Alec Bryan
Surrey memories
My Birth place
I was born on the 23rd March 1947 in my grandparents' home, Hope Cottage to the right of the Sun Inn and next to Lloyds Bank. Nurse Caines was in attendance. To the left of the Sun Inn lived Lord King ex chairman of British Airways. In front of the pub was a pond that was filled in when the village went onto main drainage. The village boasted six shops, two petrol pumps, a bank, two pubs, a social club, village hall, barbers, allotments, infant school, church, seven ponds, seven dairy herds, cricket and football teams, hotel and Fire Station (still going today run by part time firemen). Sadly many are now gone. The telephone exchange was the first automated exchange ...read more here
A memory of Dunsfold contributed by Alec Bryan
Childhood in Hascombe during wartime.
I was born in 2 Pound Cottages in 1940. It was the home of my maternal grandparents Arthur John and Katie May Street. He was a gardener who worked for Col. Harper at Lamberts. I recall a house in Godalming that was hit by a bomb and being embarrassed by furniture on view! There was a lone grave in what is now the churchyard extension at St Peter's of a German airman who had been found dead on Hascombe Hill. I am told that his body has since been returned to his family. Nurse Caines exercising her goats on their leads was a frequent sight if one were walking in the countryside. She ministered ...read more here
A memory of Hascombe contributed by Hilda Jean Waddington
Chiddingfold memories
As a child living in Chidd during the war we had freedom to roam anywhere we wished, ie Sidenhurst lakes (where I caught my first carp), the brooks where we fished for tiddlers which we cooked over a camp fire, climbed trees and made camps. Girls and boys played and swam together down the Lagg's in water so muddy it was like treacle but we were never ill or caught any disease, there was no H&S rules in those days. I now live in the West Country but still visit Chidd 2/3 times a year. Bill MacDonald. Cornwall
A memory of Chiddingfold contributed by William MacDonald
Extracts From Dunsfold & Surrey books
Before the Second World War this was regarded as the most remote village in the county, with its cottages and houses straggling along the western side of its long green. But that great conflict saw Dunsfold become the home of a major fighter-plane aerodrome, afterwards a testing base for British Aerospace's modern Harrier jets. The village's position at the west end of the main runway meant that for more than fifty years its air of tranquillity was often broken by the roar of jet aircraft.
An extract from from"Surrey Revisited Photographic Memories".
Dunsfold, north-west of
Alfold, has a very large
rectangular green, and the
parish church of about
1270 is half a mile to the
west. Frith’s photographer
has chosen to record the
post office, a somewhat
feeble piece of Surrey
vernacular revival-style with
a tile-hung first floor. The
building still houses a shop,
the Village Stores and Post
Office, but the pillar box (in
use in this view) has been
moved to the right-hand
side of the shop front.
An extract from from"Surrey Living Memories".
Three of Church Street’s five pubs are in this photo - the Corn Meter extreme left, the Star
centre left, and the Live and Let Live just beyond the archway on the right. The arch led to
the rear of the Angel Hotel yard, owned at that time by John Jasper Taylor, who also had a
temperance hotel, Deanery House, further down Church Street.
An extract from from"Godalming Town and City Memories".
In Edwardian days cyclists frequented Godalming, especially at weekends. There was a demand
for teashops, and Church Street had three - one is on the left here. Also very popular was the
sending of picture postcards, which served people much as the telephone does today - Eatons
paper shop, on the left, claimed to have the largest selection.
An extract from from"Godalming Town and City Memories".
During the coaching era the need to re-shoe horses must have
made the blacksmith essential. The forge in Godalming was
situated very centrally, in Pound Lane, where Record Corner is
now. In the 1860s the smith added to his business by opening a
beerhouse, appropriately named the Three Horseshoes, next to the
forge. Also nearby was a whitesmith, Mr H Lewer who was also a
gasfitter and electrician.
An extract from from"Godalming Town and City Memories".







