Broadstone, The Broadway c.1960
Photo ref: B735023
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Photo ref: B735023
Photo of Broadstone, The Broadway c.1960

More about this scene

Broadstone is named after Broadstone Farm, which in turn took its name from broad stones spanning a stream. One is outside the Stepping Stones pub. The main road, which includes The Broadway, which we see here, was built in 1765. Baxter's is now Bath Travel. The railway bridge is at the far end. The now-closed railway arrived in 1847, but since there were few houses, a station was not built until 1872. There were just five villas here in 1888 when Lord Wimborne built the school. An early resident was the naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace, a contemporary of Charles Darwin, who lived at the now demolished Old Orchard in Wallace Road from 1889 until his death in 1913.

An extract from Poole and Sandbanks Photographic Memories.

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Poole and Sandbanks Photographic Memories

Poole and Sandbanks Photographic Memories

The photo 'Broadstone, the Broadway c1960' appears in this book.

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A Selection of Memories from Broadstone

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 Broadstone

Sparked a Memory for you?

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

My parents ran a shop on the Broadway from the late nineteen forties until the early fifties, I think. It was a general store and – as far as I know – a seed merchant’s. I was born in 1950, but Heather, my older sister, would probably know more - I must ask her. The business failed when the manager of Dad’s ambitious second branch in Kinson ( I ...see more
Hallo, my grandfather Frank Sherwood worked at the factory in 1939, and the family lived in the Broadstone area. Does anyone have any memories to share about the factory of the Sherwoods?
I moved to Broadstone with my parents at the tender age of 2, and we lived in Sidney Road, off York Road. It was 1950, and ,of course there was no Waterloo Estate at that time, so York Road ended when it came to the railway line and the tiny station of Creekmoor Halt. Most of the people using the station worked in the Cordite factory (where Siemens is situated now). It seemed quite a forbiding and secretive place to ...see more
My earliest memories of Broadstone stem from about 1937 when I was five years old. We lived in Southbourne at the time and frequently went to Broadstone at weekends to visit my "aunt Flo" and her family who lived at Lower Blandford Road. She was my mother's sister and their children Roy and Rex Cannings were about my age (Roy and I were born six days apart and Rex was a bit younger), also my Dad's ...see more