Lingfield, The Old Prison And The Pond c.1950
Photo ref: L50009
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Photo ref: L50009
Photo of Lingfield, The Old Prison And The Pond c.1950

More about this scene

This village is a disappointment: its good bits are separated by development that started when the railway arrived in the 1880s. This view shows one of the most picturesque areas apart from the church. Admittedly, the Old Cage, the village lock-up or prison, looks like a miniature church. Its date is disputed - some consider it an 18th- century confection made from older stone. The village pond, the prison, the ancient hollow oak and the cottages nearby all remain today.

Memories of Lingfield, the Old Prison and the Pond c1950

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. These memories are of Lingfield, The Old Prison And The Pond c.1950

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We used to walk past the pond everyday on our way to Lingfield Primary School. This was about 40 - 45 yrs ago now. One memory I will always have in when the pond was frozen over and my brother and his friends decided they would try their talents out at ice skating. We were all surrounded watching these boys and, I have to admit, to feeling really frightened when the ice broke and I watched with utter terror as my ...see more
I used to live at Raymead which was a complex of 24 prefabs, they have been replaced now by a new estate. I come back to Lingfield every year to see the village I grew up in. When I got married to a local lad in 1963 we moved to Tandridge, unfortunately it didn't last due to me but we used to walk to the village pond at night and there was at Christmas one night when it was snowing and they had put fairy ...see more
Jean Chambers mentioned the bomb dropping on the school in 1943 - my parents shop (John Banks Outfitters) was almost opposite the school and I was born at the end of 1943 being given my second name of "Heather" after Heather Lumsden who was killed in the school and was a good friend of my parents. Jean also mentioned the bomb that was found in 2002 at the bottom of what had been their garden. I wonder whether we lived ...see more
Rod Swift remarked (in a previous memory) about falling in the pond - well I was one of these. Rod must be my cousin's son, as my aunt and uncle lived in the house referred to. Around 1953 on an icy cold day in winter, a crowd of us were going home after school. On passing the pond we knew there was thick ice so decided to skate on the ice. We did not take into account that it was beginning to thaw and around ...see more