Places
8 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
66 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
37 maps found.
Books
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Memories
16 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Childhood
In the 1960s I lived in Ogilvie Terrace and spent lots of days wandering happy and safe in Deri. I remember the nut wood, picking whinberries, Doreen's shop, the gas pipes where we balanced and luckily did not come to harm, the horse-shoe ...Read more
A memory of Deri in 1960 by
Mill Street Clowne. 1950
The gentleman pushing a cart in the foreground of this picture is my grandfather, Ernest Pearce (1895-1970). The cart was used to transport bundles of sticks that he cut for sale as firewood. They were sold for 4d a bundle. ...Read more
A memory of Clowne in 1950 by
The Bell Inn
I moved to Outwood 10 years ago to work at the Bell Inn. With its own unique charm I was taken with it from the moment I entered. Originally run by a Mr. John Lane the pub was sold a few years later to a private investor and was sold ...Read more
A memory of Outwood in 2008 by
Scott And Jupp Families
I was brought up in Bletchingley in the 1960s and my father Clyde Howard Willats was born near Redhill. He knew Outwood well and used to tell me the story about the two families who owned the two windmills, they were the ...Read more
A memory of Outwood in 1958 by
Entree Into That Green And Pleasant Land.
My name was Jeannette Turner. In about 1936 my mother father and self-age 3 moved from the Eastend of London, via first moving into 46, Hillingdon Road Barnhurst, to stay with my recently widowed Auntie Daisy. My ...Read more
A memory of Dartford
My First 22 Years
I was born at 48 Durban Road pathway in Jan 1944. Went to school at pathway Junior school and then to Patchway Secondry Modern School as it was called then. I had so many friends whilst growing up and played in the fields and at ...Read more
A memory of Patchway by
Incorrect Title
Chapel Road. The Ebenezer Chapel towards Outwood on the right is where the name was derived from. The Ebenezer Chapel was the most important building in that road. In the picture and to the right the road leads to Horley and was ...Read more
A memory of Smallfield in 1930 by
Burnt House Cottage
This was of course taken long before Burnt House Cottage was built. This was where my grandmother Ruth Hare lived. The cottage is now to the right of the road. In the background are accommodation blocks at Carver Barracks ...Read more
A memory of Wimbish in 1980 by
Great Place To Live 1957 To 1983
I lived in a bungalow in Broadbridge Lane (Redehall End) from my birth in 1957 to 1983. I always thought it was a great place to live, with a huge garden to play in, plus the surrounding woods and fields. ...Read more
A memory of Smallfield by
Tab Packets
I was eleven in this year 1954 and me and the lads were by this time avid collectors of anything, tab packets was top of most lists, we would scour the streets and gutters wherever we went for that elusive cardboard. The bins behind ...Read more
A memory of Newburn in 1954 by
Captions
11 captions found. Showing results 1 to 11.
The slopes below Banstead Wood make a fine vantage point above Outwood Lane meandering on its way towards Kingswood.
In Outwood Lane, this building is now the Woodside Methodist Church. Between 1840 and 1885 only one new Wesleyan chapel was opened in Leeds: at Roscoe Place in 1861.
In Outwood Lane, this building is now the Woodside Methodist Church. Between 1840 and 1885 only one new Wesleyan chapel was opened in Leeds: at Roscoe Place in 1861.
In Outwood Lane, this building is now the Woodside Methodist Church. Between 1840 and 1885 only one new Wesleyan chapel was opened in Leeds: at Roscoe Place in 1861.
This pair of windmills stand on Outwood Common: a post mill with four double-shuttered spring sails and a roundhouse protecting the trestle, and also a tall weatherboarded smock mill.
Back to the west of Blindley Heath the route reaches Outwood, a hamlet on the edge of heath and woodland, some of it owned by the National Trust.
In the centre can be seen the viaduct taking the railway over Outwood Lane on its way to Kingswood. The line was opened in 1897, partly as a speculation by Sir Cosmo Bonsor.
Here the photographer looks west along the High Street from the junction with Outwood Lane on the morning of a fox hunt - this type of scene was much favoured for Frith postcards.
The 1890s terrace with its four gabled full-height bay windows steps down the hill; the left-hand one on the corner of Outwood Lane is now no longer a Barclays Bank, but the offices of financial consultants
Traditionally pubs of this name were places where you could hire a horse; such animals would obviously be 'nags', as no-one would hire out good quality horses to all and sundry.
It was originally named King's Circus; work started in February 1754, but Wood himself died in May and the work had to be completed by his son, John Wood the Younger.