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Whitehouse Industrial Estate

Whitehouse Industrial Estate maps

Historic maps of Whitehouse Industrial Estate and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all Whitehouse Industrial Estate maps

Whitehouse Industrial Estate photos

We have no photos of Whitehouse Industrial Estate, although we do have photos of these nearby places:

Dutton| Daresbury| Halton| Frodsham| Acton Bridge| Runcorn| Moore| Crowton| Higher Walton| Hatchmere| Weaverham| Barnton| Comberbach| Stockton Heath| Farnworth| Helsby| Widnes| Marbury| Great Budworth| Sandiway| Ditton| Grappenhall| Hartford| Warrington| Northwich| Thelwall| Davenham| Woolston

Whitehouse Industrial Estate area books

Displaying 1 of 13 books about Whitehouse Industrial Estate and the local area.   View all books for this area

Whitehouse Industrial Estate books
View all 13 Whitehouse Industrial Estate and Cheshire books

Memories of Whitehouse Industrial Estate

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Cheshire memories

My Mother's Home Village

My mum lived in Preston-on-the-Hill in a farmhouse belonging to her parents Albert and Frances Egerton, she was the youngest child with 2 sisters, Margery and Joyce and a brother, Ken.

Breaking Down

I broke down in the tunnel in the early 1970s, my kids thought it was great pushing us out off the tunnel wall, they were realy black at the end. I made sure it didn't happen going back!

Lewis Carroll

Parish Church c1955
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I was married here in 1964 having lived in Moore all my life up to then. My mum and dad are both buried here as is my granny. At the very end of the church the stained glass windows show characters from Alice in Wonderland. Lewis Carroll's father was the vicar here

Summer Home

Main Street c1955
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The house behind the telephone pole is number 73, my grandparents, Jim and Annie McQuillan lived there from the 30s until the late 60s or early 70s. I used to spend all summer there travelling from Middlesbrough on the bus via Warrington, on my own from age 6. Can you imagine the reaction these days to such an adventure? The shop on the left was Dicky Dones newsagents - the local bookie before betting shops were legalised. I was known as "that kid from Yorkshire". This was before the shopping city and the conversion of Halton to a Liverpool overspill. Happy days.

The Under Road

The space between the houses and shed was the beginning or the end of the Under Road, it went round to the other side of the village, and finished opposite the chapel on Main Street, a nice walk or bike ride in the summer, or a short cut to the common, or the steps that went up to the castle. The old smithy was on the right if you went from this end, I suppose it was named the Under Road because the castle loomed over the top of you as you walked along, a nice quiet road in those days.

Going to School

This path was a lifeline to me when I was going to school on my bike. As you look at this picture there was houses to the left and Halton Brow and corn fields to the right. I came down this path on my bike and up Boston Avenue to Grange Sec Mod. The downside was going back up it, it was very steep in those days, the opening in the village was easily missed if you didn't know it, a very small entry between to buildings, a well kept secret to the villagers in those days.

Yesteryear

If you ever wondered what it was like before the shopping city, this picture says it all. This was it before the overspill. If you was to stand and take the same picture you would  be somewhere around Castle Rise/Boston Avenue, a view lost forever.

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