Selborne, High Street 1967
Photo ref: S89030
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Photo ref: S89030
Photo of Selborne, High Street 1967

More about this scene

When Selborne is seen from Selborne Hanger on a summer's day it looks absolutely spectacular, a typical Hampshire village. It has suffered from heavy lorries rumbling through; now, those over 7.5 tonnes have been banned. There are two thriving pubs; one of them, the Queen's Hotel, is on the left. There are shops, a post office, a village hall and a sports pavilion.

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A Selection of Memories from Selborne

For many years now, we've been inviting visitors to our website to add their own memories to share their experiences of life as it was, prompted by the photographs in our archive. Here are some from Selborne

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The brother of my 5xgt grandfather William Maxwell, was Thomas Maxwell, born in Harting in 1754. Thomas and Elizabeth's son Henry Maxwell, born 1807 in Harting, was by the census of 1841 living in Selborne with his wife Jane and two sons, Henry Thomas Maxwell and George Alfred Maxwell and daughter Emma Jane. Henry was listed as a Grocer and Draper and this business continued into the 1900s, run by his son ...see more
We lived on the outskirts of selborne, my parents and three brothers and sister, at Lower Noar Hill Farm and Homestead Farm. My great-grandparents, grandparents and parents farmed the land between Selborne Common and Noar Hill for more than 70 years. Before us it was the Ganders, who later emigrated to Canada for health reasons. My other grandparents lived in Goslings Croft in the village. My father was secretary of ...see more