Places
17 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Littleworth, Wiltshire
- Littleworth, Bedfordshire
- Littleworth, Staffordshire (near Stafford)
- Littleworth, Oxfordshire (near Wallingford)
- Littleworth, Staffordshire (near Cannock)
- Littleworth, Gloucestershire (near Nailsworth)
- Littleworth, Yorkshire
- Littleworth, Warwickshire
- Littleworth, Hereford & Worcester (near Redditch)
- Littleworth, Gloucestershire (near Chipping Campden)
- Littleworth, Sussex
- Littleworth, Hereford & Worcester (near Worcester)
- Littleworth, Oxfordshire (near Oxford)
- Littleworth, Oxfordshire (near Faringdon)
- Littleworth Common, Buckinghamshire
- Littleworth End, Staffordshire
- Town Littleworth, Sussex
Photos
4 photos found. Showing results 1 to 4.
Maps
84 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
8 memories found. Showing results 1 to 8.
Driving Through Littleworth Toward Wheatley
i can clearly remember driving through the village of littleworth with my mum and dad, past the cricketers pub and then being hit by the stench from what i recall was some sort of sheepskin factory or ...Read more
A memory of Wheatley in 1975
I Remember Wheatley
My name is Bill Mitchell - when young in Wheatley other children called me Billy. Some of my old school friends still live in or around Wheatley. My father had a shop in Station Road for a while selling electrical goods, and he ...Read more
A memory of Wheatley in 1960 by
1950s
In 1956 we lived in Fittleworth (Orchard House) while I attended Midhurst Grammar School. I could listen to the church clock chime the hours if I woke up at night. I would like to hear from anyone who was there then. David Morris Victoria, B.C. Canada
A memory of Fittleworth in 1956 by
Back Ends Treasure
I was brought up in Chipping Campden, living first at the pre-fabs in Berrington Road, then Littleworth Estate. Enjoying my childhood in the countryside, glorious summers, apples and cherries in abundance in the orchards ...Read more
A memory of Chipping Campden in 1956 by
Fittleworth Mill 1950s
I have loved this view of the Mill ever since first discovering it as a young man of 17 or so in the early 1950s, and I have a virtually identical photograph of my own taken at that time. Sadly however I found on a visit ...Read more
A memory of Fittleworth in 1954 by
H N Hussey
My husband inherited a watercolour of a barn entitled 'Fittleworth 1882' by the artist named above - it could read Hry N Hussey for Henry - but not clear. We wondered whether anyone could shed any light
A memory of Fittleworth in 1880 by
Hednesford
I remember Kings fish and chip shop in Uxbridge Street, it's now a Chinese takeaway, also Trabulis Cafe, soup and exra bread for 8d (old money). In the 60s we used to go for our dinner when I was at Littleworth Boys School (now Kingsmead ...Read more
A memory of Hednesford by
Pack Horse Bridge And Surrounding Area In Flood
I was born and bread in Anstey, 21 Rosebery Road, a council house with my 2 brothers Kelvin and Clive. I loved Anstey I still do. I have a lot of childhood memories. I joined the Royal Navy on leaving ...Read more
A memory of Anstey by
Captions
14 captions found. Showing results 1 to 14.
By the 1920s, Fittleworth had become an artists' mecca owing to its pretty woods, its fine views from its commons, its quaint architecture and, it has been suggested, the warm welcome offered at the Swan
Just south-east of Stopham Bridge is the confluence of the Arun and its most important tributary, the Western Rother, previously known as the Turning Stream or Westwater, which extended to Fittleworth,
Across the Arun we head north to Fittleworth, a village running north from the River Rother up to the Petworth to Pulborough road, now the A283.
In this view from the west, the man in the straw boater looks past the school with its attached hipped-roofed master's house to Lea Hill, now known as Fittleworth Common.
Fittleworth is a picturesque village of fine old houses, commons and fir woods.The local people call this 'Hallelujah Corner' because it is a sharp bend on a narrow and busy main road, near the church
The Swan, near the river in Lower Fittleworth and recorded in a document dated 1640, is possibly one of the two alehouses mentioned earlier in 1536.
When this photograph was taken, Fittleworth had its own railway station nearby, and something like one thousand gallons of milk a day, produced at local farms, were loaded onto trains here.
Here we see picturesque timber-framed cottages in the centre of Fittleworth, to the south-east of Petworth.
The bridge we can see here is a railway bridge built by the 'Little North Western', who constructed a line to Morecambe in 1849; their station was at Green Ayre.
A little north of the attractive village of Naseby, on the Market Harborough road, this 40 ft high stone obelisk commemorates the Battle of Naseby at which the New Model Army routed the Royalists in 1645
A little north of Horam, on the Heathfield road and up Steelyards Hill, stands Stillyans, an oasthouse converted into a house.
A little north of the High Street Junction, off Abingdon Road, is Gravel Lane, which has a number of farm buildings on each side at its west end.
The lane leading north from the A283 passes Fittleworth House, whose east front can be seen beyond a stone wall and piers at the end of a rectangular close, now superb gardens.
Fittleworth is a picturesque village of fine old houses, commons and fir woods.
Places (17)
Photos (4)
Memories (8)
Books (0)
Maps (84)