Shefford, Bedfordshire
Shefford photos
Displaying 3 of 9 old photos of Shefford. View all Shefford photos
Shefford maps
Historic maps of Shefford and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Shefford maps
Shefford books
Displaying 2 of 7 books about Shefford and the local area. View all Shefford books
4 Shefford photos appear in 3 Frith book titles. You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Shefford
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Bedfordshire memories
The gable end of the house on the left is 39 Mill Lane and Back St starts at the junction over the hill and not visible here. My father built the house about 1935 when he was 21 years old. I grew up there until 1955 when it was sold and we moved from Clophill for a short time. We returned in 1957 and lived in the Old Police House in The Slade until I married in 1966 and brought my first home in Back St. I have traced my family's time in Clophill from about 1750 until 1980 in a new book which is now available.
Shared on 20 December 2007
This is where I live, it is no longer a village post office. It was built in 1680, and we are returning it to a residential property.
Shared on 11 October 2006
My great grandfather Henry Tingey, was born November 18, 1819, in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire. He was the son of James Tingey and Elizabeth Boniss. James and Elizabeth, and family later moved from Bigglewade, Bedfordshire, and moved Lower Caldecut near the 46th milestone from London in the perish of Northhill. The family of father and mother and two boys and four sisters were in the business of raising wholesale vegatable and garden seeds and were very successful.
In 1849 the missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, (Mormons) told their gospel message to Henry and his wife Ann Young, (daughter of James and Lucy Young). Henry and Ann joined the Latter-Day-Saint church and migrated to America in 1849. They spent three years in St Louis, Missouri and then traveled by oxen and wagon train to Salt Lake City, Utah arriving in September 1853. Henry became a very devote follower of the Mormon Church. He settled in Sessions Settlement (now Bountiful, Utah), and later moved to Brigham City Utah, where he was in the garden and fruit business. He was named Bishop of the First Ward in Brigham in 1877, and set apart by Brigham Young, who was the president of the LDS church at that time. Henry Tingey was given a blessing that his family would be numerous. This blessing was fulfilled as Henry lived during the time of polygamy and he married four wives and fathered 31 children. Henry Tingey passed away at the age of 77, on February 14, 1896 in Brigham City, Utah. He is essentially, the father of the well known, Tingey families in Davis and Box Elder Counties, in Utah. Almost all of his children, grand children and great grand children, and great grand children (as of December 2007) number into the thousands and have been pillars, leaders and devote members of their community, and of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Henry Tingey was truely regarded as noble man and respected citizen in Brigham City, Utah. Biggleswade, England can be proud that such a good man was born in their city. It is astonishment, that such a young man as Henry Tingey, could come from humble circumstances in England in 1849, and accomplish what he did as a pioneer in the American West,.
Shared on 06 December 2007
My abiding memory of Ampthill is when I used to go to the Saturday pictures with my cousins and the fire engine would be called out. The only problem was the siren that called them out was the old wartime air-raid siren. What a noise !!! I lived in Maulden but often visited Ampthill. thanks for the memories. !!!
Shared on 26 November 2007
Extracts From Shefford & Bedfordshire books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Shefford, inspired by Frith photos.
Bedfordshire Photographic Memories
Shefford’s title derives from the name ‘Sheepford’, an indication of its origins. Sheep on the High Street are a distant memory, but the town has managed to preserve a number of older buildings - including the 16th-century porch on the left. Despite its moderately tumble-down appearance, The Porch is now a bank.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Once an important market town, Shefford was blighted this century by through traffic; its central T-junction was a bottleneck until the town was recently by-passed. Here we look south down North Bridge Street towards that junction with High Street. On the left is Porch House, a heavily-restored 16th-century house, now a bank, with the pavement passing through its ground floor. To the right is W Caton & Sons, Wine and Spirit Merchants, as it says in faded paintwork on the gable of this 1881 building.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Sandy was originally a modest Roman settlement on the Roman road between St Albans and Godmanchester; in the 18th century the town became important for its coaching inns servicing the Great North Road. However, it is a somewhat bitty town, and the market square is a distinct disappointment. Here, a little further north up High Street, we look west along Bedford Road. The late 19th-century town hall is on the left. By 1925 it was the Astor Cinema, and is now the Roundabout Club, for there is now a roundabout roughly where the photographer is standing.
Read more and see photos from this book.




