Stoke-Sub-Hamdon, Somerset
Stoke-Sub-Hamdon photos
Displaying 1 of 3 old photos of Stoke-Sub-Hamdon. View all Stoke-Sub-Hamdon photos
Stoke-Sub-Hamdon maps
Historic maps of Stoke-Sub-Hamdon and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Stoke-Sub-Hamdon maps
Stoke-Sub-Hamdon books
Displaying 3 of 8 books about Stoke-Sub-Hamdon and the local area. View all Stoke-Sub-Hamdon books
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Stoke-Sub-Hamdon
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memories of Stoke-Sub-Hamdon
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We lived in Castle Street opposite the school> I remember neighbours as the Mounters, Tratt, Gosneys, and I remember the Browns who were very kind to my mother when Dad died in 1956, 3 days after my twelfth birthday, he is buried in the churchyard of St Marys Church. The horse and cart that a couple had who lived at the... [more]
Shared on 09 April 2008
I love this place, I grew up around here and all my family are littered all over the place.
I used to get my old dead dog macky to drag me up to the top and then I'd drag him back up. I'd always get stuck in the mud and i'd fall out of my wellies. Oh I miss being... [more]
Shared on 18 January 2008
Somerset memories
I was evacuated to Tintinhull during the war years, and remember getting off the train at Pen Mill Station with my gas mask case, and waiting for someone to look after us. I was lucky, there was a Mr and Mrs Lye took me to their home in Montacute Road facing what used to be an allotment where Mr Lye used... [more]
Shared on 07 August 2008
I remember well the village green ,the stocks and the enormous elm tree, we had to walk from school beside St Margarets church, over the green, past the tree and the stocks to the village hall where we had our lunch(ugh school dinners) do you remember Mrs Kensington? Sorry to say the tree was lost to dutch elm disease, the stocks... [more]
Shared on 21 September 2007
Just like to say I have many happy memories of rollerskating down past the green and went to school just by the church in the photograph and remember the stocks on the green. Are they still there by the big oak tree?
Shared on 23 August 2006
My father was in the RAF (Ron Jerred) and whenever we came back from abroad we went to Odcombe until he was given a new posting. Me and my sister would go to Odcombe school for short periods. My main memories are of the smell of the little sweet shop and playing in the playground at the school. ... [more]
Shared on 03 April 2008
My father was born in South Petherton. I think his father's name was Charlie Potts, they lived in Compton Road as far as I can remember. I used to love visiting Somerset as my uncle and aunties had farms where I could help (or hinder) my uncles on my summer holidays. One was called Ron and Doris Rowswell who had Hill... [more]
Shared on 17 December 2008
I was born at Harp Road Garage, the eldest of 4 boys. I was educated at boarding schools and played cricket for South Petherton. My grandparents and great grandparents owned the original Wheatsheaf Inn opposite the Blake Hall.
My grandmother left the Wheatsheaf to live in The Little Thatch, St James Street. My father, Ernie Giles, was born in 1901 and... [more]
Shared on 11 March 2007
Extracts From Stoke-Sub-Hamdon & Somerset books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Stoke-Sub-Hamdon, inspired by Frith photos.
This village prospered thanks to the quarries on Ham Hill, and the High Street has some fine 17th-century houses built in Ham stone. A glove-making industry grew in the 19th century, when the street housed members of the Southcombe family, factory owners. The once numerous shops have become reduced to a handful.
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Glastonbury Photographic Memories
To reach our final village, Pilton, we must leave our straight route at East Pennard and travel almost due north for a couple of miles or so. Pilton is a large but quite dispersed village beside the Glastonbury to Shepton Mallet road, and we are now some six miles from the former. The parish church, dedicated to St John the Baptist, developed from the Norman period onward through the Middle... [more]
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Glastonbury Photographic Memories
An intriguing photograph - are the men beside the pile of stones carrying out repairs or new construc- tion? It looks as though they may be finishing work on the wall in the foreground, perhaps linked to the new frontage for the main building constructed around this time. The wall was probably demolished when the factory was extended in 1933.
Read more and see photos from this book.
