Winterbourne Earls
Winterbourne Earls maps
Historic maps of Winterbourne Earls and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Winterbourne Earls maps
Winterbourne Earls photos
We have no photos of Winterbourne Earls, although we do have photos of these nearby places:
Old Sarum| Salisbury| Bemerton| Britford| Harnham| Wilsford| Amesbury| Bodenham| Stoford| Great Wishford| Bulford| Stonehenge| Cholderton| Coombe Bissett| Bishopstone
Winterbourne Earls area books
Displaying 1 of 12 books about Winterbourne Earls and the local area. View all books for this area
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Winterbourne Earls
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Wiltshire memories
Dad''s Panic
Dad was village copper for several years (our old Police House is now "Peelers" in Thorneydown Road) and had a number of people he got on well with. He tended not to panic too often but one day a message came through that had him rush out in panic because of the loss of one of his friends, Pat Pocock from the Post Office.
I can't remember the exact year but it was early 1960's.
Later the Post Office was moved to a shop in Thorneydown Road and later still it was taken over by Frank Gaulton who still ran it when we left Winterbourne in 1964.
SORRY, BUT WE USED TO CALL IT GIBBS AND SPEW
Yes, I worked there when I was 15 with two other boys. I remember Tony Fletcher and Alan Blackman (are you still out there?). It was a dark warm place when on full tilt, it looked like London in the fog. I remember the characters like old Seth, he could drink beer straight from the fermentation tank whilst it was still hot, yes, it was free, we used to have a ration of two pints a day hence I was legless after my first, then I used to save it till the weekend to sell to the oldies who could drink as much as they could get. Seth was a bomb, he loved the gee gees but it would take him 26 minutes to go to the bookies and back so he devised a way of getting out. I didn't know where he did work in the brewery, only that every now and then he would come to where I was on the barrel wash, it was a monster to... Read more
The Town Path
Have seen this view many times in my younger days back in the late 1920s and early 30s, just after crossing the footbridge over the river, when on my way to see my dear old gran at Harnham. I can still remember the smell of the old mill.
Street Where I Live
Nice to see that not a lot has chnaged since this photo was taken to what it is like to day.
More cars and people now of course.
The Old School
My place of work. I have done a lot of work on collecting archive photos and making electronic copies of some of the many fascinating letters and articles written by the old girls 1880's to present.
GIBBS MEW BREWERY
Does anybody remember Gibbs Mew Grewery on Gigant Street?
Salisbury College of Art
In 1960 this was the main building of Salisbury College of Art. The college specialised in photography, fine arts and, when I joined, was one of the first provincial art colleges to award a recognised graphic design qualification. It also offered courses in hairdressing and sign writing. There were several very popular tutors, Tony Brown, Fox-Talbot (not the original) and Charles Cusden among them. Mr Cusden, who had previously been my art master at Bishop Wordsworth School, went on to have his own television programme on the arts. As the college grew it expanded to take in other buildings in Salisbury including what is now the older part of the coffee shop opposite the entrance to St Thomas's Church. Here was printing and typography with studio space on the first floor. Earlier in the 1900s the New Street building had also housed the Bishop Wordsworth School's girls.
