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Freshbrook

Freshbrook maps (2 available)

Old map of Freshbrook

Freshbrook photos (none available)

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Freshbrook books (15 available)

Freshbrook memories

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

Wiltshire memories

the Town Path

Salisbury, the Cathedral from the River 1887

Have seen this view many times in my younger days back in the late 1920s and early 30s, just after crossing the footbridge over the river, when on my way to see my dear old gran at Harnham. I can still remember the smell of the old mill.
A memory of Salisbury contributed by Mr E Drewitt

Family connections to The Limes.

Oare, the Village c1955

The house in the photograph is The Limes and has a family connection. A great uncle on my mother's side purchased this property. He was Alfred William Reynolds, who was an innkeeper in the White Hart pub opposite the house. He combined publican and greyhound coursing trainer for a period in the early 1900s. He is said to have purchased The Limes after training the winner of the Waterloo Cup in 1908. A photograph taken around this time shows outbuildings to the left and a thatched cottage.
The property is still in existence today and seems little changed. The White Hart is also still a pub and also little changed on the outside. Alfred's ...read more here
A memory of Oare contributed by George Davey

W Redman & Sons

Malmesbury, War Memorial and Westport Post Office c1950

The van on the left of the photograph was owned by my great-grandfather Wilfred Redman who had the butcher's shop at 41 The Triangle, Westport from the early 1900's until 1945. He died in that year and his son took over the family business. Wilfred Redman came to Malmesbury in the early 1900s from Nailsworth, Glos where his mother had a stationery shop. The van was registered to Wilfred on 30 June 1936.
A memory of Malmesbury contributed by Linda Hares

Family connections.

Box, Glovers Lane c1965

This is a picture of myself with my sister and brother and my sister's friend. I was 13 years old. My sister Theo is the girl with the handbag, she was 9 years old and my brother John was 3 years old. We had been to the local store Bences and are standing outside the smallest pub in the county, The Chequers Inn. Our family home was at the top of Glovers Lane. The garden with dad's apple and cherry trees can be seen in the photograph running the full length of the lane.
A memory of Box contributed by Ann Blake

Extracts From Freshbrook & Wiltshire books

Amesbury, St Mary and St Melore's Church c1955

Amesbury dates back to at least 973; it is the nearest town to Stonehenge, and has a population of about 6,000. In 980, Amesbury Abbey was founded for Benedictine nuns. It became a priory of the Order of Fontevrault for men and women in 1177. Royal and noble ladies favoured the priory in the 13th and 14th centuries, when about 100 nuns and a few chaplains and clerks inhabited the priory. Strange to tell, the domestic parts of the priory were such a distance from the main building that it is questionable whether the church is for the parish or was the priory church.
An extract from from"Wiltshire Churches Photographic Memories".

Amesbury, St Mary and St Melor's Church c1955

St Mary and St Melore’s is basically Norman, large and built mainly of flint; its large squat Early English tower rests on triple chamfered arches and has three wide-spaced single bell openings. The east window is the work of Butterfield, who restored the church in 1853, ten years before he began work on Aldbourne. He put in the vivid coloured tiles on the east wall, and he is responsible for the Perpendicular south aisle and west end. The outline of a chapel remains in the east side walls. The jambs of an early 13th-century doorway west of the north-west corner of the truncated nave have been reset, but the door’s purpose remains a mystery. The south aisle is early Perpendicular, and has a two-bay arcade with a pier of four shafts and four hollows, decorated capitals and arches of two hollow chamfers. The font is 12th-century and of Purbeck marble with shallow blank arches; a wooden pulpit, by Butterfield, stands on a chunky stone base. The stained glass is worth studying, as are the 15th- and 16th-century carved roofs. The clock on the tower came from Amesbury Abbey nearby - it was given to the church in 1971. Its mechanism is 15th- century, but it was altered to take a pendulum.
An extract from from"Wiltshire Churches Photographic Memories".

Avebury, St James' Church c1955

The cylindrical Norman font is stunning: it has intersected arches, big scrolls and two big serpents with twisted tails, their heads looking at a saintly bishop, who is wearing a typical Norman pleated cassock and holding a crozier. The lower parts of the excellent Perpendicular rood screen and lofts were largely restored in the 1900s. Parts of the stalls are 17th-century, but few survived the Reformation. The Manor nearby was built on the site of a small Benedictine foundation of the early 12th century, dissolved in 1414. Fragments of it were used in the construction of the house, which was built in 1557 and enlarged in 1600. Another manor house, Trusloe, is connected to the churchyard by a footbridge across a stone bridge.
An extract from from"Wiltshire Churches Photographic Memories".

Bradford-On-Avon, Holy Trinity Church c1955

The eastern chapel was the Horton family’s worshipping place. The stained glass in the south window has several Netherlands roundels of the 16th century and later. Brasses commemorate the great clothier Thomas Horton and his wife. There are also memorials to Anne Long, 1601, in brass, and to Charles Steward, 1701: a standing figure (by Nost) is in front of a blank arch, with mourning putti left and right. Father and son John Thresher, 1741, have an architectural tablet with two putti outside holding draperies. Anthony Methuen, 1737, is a standing monument by Rysbrack, with a grey sarcophagus framed with Ionic columns carrying a pediment.
An extract from from"Wiltshire Churches Photographic Memories".

Bradford-On-Avon, St Laurence's Saxon Chapel 1900

Perhaps the chapel was built to house the relics of St Edward the Martyr, which were moved there from Shaftesbury. St Aldhelm built an ecclesiola at Bradford, and a monastery is recorded in a deed of 705 when he was Abbot. Irvine believed the building to be late, rather than early, Saxon, as is suggested by the decoration. The controversy continues on the date of the construction. The outside walls have three horizontal tiers and gables in the nave and chancel.
An extract from from"Wiltshire Churches Photographic Memories".