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Fyfield

Fyfield photos (2 available)

Old photo of Fyfield

Fyfield maps (2 available)

Old map of Fyfield

Fyfield books (17 available)

Fyfield memories

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

Wiltshire memories

Lockeridge School

Whilst researching my family history I have found several photographs of classes at Lockeridge School 1915. It could be my mother Dorothy Mortimore with standard 11.
A memory of Lockeridge contributed by Jill Brill

Where is this cottage?

West Overton, c1955

Does anyone know whereabouts in West Overton this cottage was and whether it is still standing.

Wartime Marlborough

Marlborough, Polly Tea Rooms c1955

Sent out of London during the Blitz with my mother, grandmother and sister, a visit to the Polly Tea Rooms was for special occasions only. We loved it when the parents of the boys from Marlborough School came to visit and brought their sons to Polly's for tea (even though we were only 5 or 6!). Happily, the tea rooms are still there, whilst the Merlin on the other side and at the other end of the High Street has disappeared.
A memory of Marlborough contributed by jill edison

Wartime Marlborough

Marlborough, Treacle Bolley 1907

Evacuated with my sister and mother, one of our favourite walks was to Treacle Bolley where we collected rose hips which were then sent away to be made into a source of vitamin C and distributed to those who needed it. On a visit to Marlborough (from London) a few years ago, I was unable to find Treacle Bolley nor anyone who had ever heard of it. Is there anyone out there who knows this lovely spot? (April 2008)
A memory of Marlborough contributed by jill edison

Extracts From Fyfield & Wiltshire books

Fyfield, St Nicholas's Church c1955

Fyfield – which means ‘five hides of land’ - is in the Vale of Pewsey near Marlborough. The church is of flint, with a Perpendicular ashlar-faced tower. The chancel is Early English, but it was restored in 1849; this restoration stretched to the 13th-century south nave windows and the north aisle.
An extract from from"Wiltshire Churches Photographic Memories".

Savernake, Forest, Puthall Gate 1906

This is a typical lodge house of the Ailesbury Estate variety; it bears Gothic features such as the ornate barge-boards and detailing to the eaves. This lodge has fish-scale tiles that were popular in the later 19th century. Labourers work- ing nearby have obviously been drafted in to add a rustic charm to the picture.
An extract from from"Marlborough Photographic Memories".

Savernake, Brown's Farm 1908

This fine old 17th- century farmhouse, built in a mixture of materials, stone, brick, tile-hanging and long straw thatch, is typical of the area around Marlborough. It was known as Brown’s by 1718. By the middle of the 20th century it was being used as an outhouse, and it was demolished in 1961–2 to make way for more modern farm buildings.
An extract from from"Marlborough Photographic Memories".

Ramsbury, Burdett Street 1906

We are looking towards Back Lane. This is a street mainly of 16th- or 17th- century timber-framed cottages. In the garden of No 2, on the bottom left of the picture, a plague pit was found with the remains of five skeletons, a legacy of the Black Death in 1348- 9. The lady wearing a flat cap looks like she means business!
An extract from from"Marlborough Photographic Memories".

Ramsbury, Moon's Mill 1907

Thought to have been built in the late 17th century, this fine old mill house, once one of ten in the Ramsbury area, was turned into a dwelling as late as the 1960s. Now called Moon’s Mill, it was previously known as Upper Mill in the 18th century, Gibbs’ Mill, and Edwards Mill in the mid 19th century.
An extract from from"Marlborough Photographic Memories".