Tettenhall, Post Office And Upper Green c.1965
Photo ref: T140012
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Photo ref: T140012
Photo of Tettenhall, Post Office And Upper Green c.1965

More about this scene

Upper Green is not so rural now, but Tettenhall remains a favoured suburb. It has always had good transport links with Wolverhampton: horse-drawn trams operated from 1878, to be replaced by trains in 1920. The station closed in 1932, but trolley buses ran instead until 1963. Today, several buses an hour still provide a link with Wolverhampton.

An extract from West Midlands Living Memories.

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West Midlands Living Memories

West Midlands Living Memories

The photo 'Tettenhall, Post Office and Upper Green c1965' appears in this book.

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A Selection of Memories from Tettenhall

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 Tettenhall

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If this has sparked a memory, why not share it here?

The cottage on the left of the photo belonged to my grandparents - Thomas and Elisabeth Leach from the mid 40's until the late 60's. Many happy days were spent there with my cousins.
Does anybody remember Edenhurst Preparatory School in Crowther Road? It was a private infants and primary school and I, Paul Evans, was there from the age of about 5 to 8 years. This was back in the early 1950s. It was a big old villa with huge rooms (or so they seemed to me back then). On one side the school's owner, Miss Lola Perks, throned triumphantly over her small charges either from her high ...see more
I remember starting Tettenhall School. I remember playing hide and seek and hid in the coal shed at the back of the school then being dragged in front of the whole school at assembly for having a black face and clothes from the coal. I remember a bus crashing through the fence off the Wergs Road which we could see from the school playground. I remember taking a sledge all the way from Claregate to ...see more
Tettenhall was a logistical centre for the Normandy Landings. Americans were stationed in Danescourt House - long since demolished. However several of the troops have returned over the years, some of whom were "mothered" by Auntie Grace - Mrs Grace Green, who at the time was the stewardess of South Staffs Golf Club, situated next to Danescourt. The Golf Club became a central reception centre for ...see more