Teddington, From The Bridge 1899
Photo ref: 43048
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More about this scene

FOR MUCH of its existence Teddington has been regarded as a quiet town between the busier Richmond, Twickenham and Kingston centres on the River Thames. Nationally it may be best remembered as the home of Teddington Studios, the location for films and TV productions. However, Teddington's proximity to London and its pleasant surroundings has attracted some significant residents. Also, Teddington is where one king learnt of his accession to the throne; it is the home of the National Physical Laboratory; it is where D-Day was planned; and the game of hockey started here. The name Teddington is Saxon in origin, and referred to the small village in the area close to the river covering what is now Teddington Lock, the nearby church buildings of St Mary and St Alban, and the river end of Teddington High Street. The wider area now regarded as Teddington, stretching from the river through Bushy Park, Fulwell and Waldegrave Road, was countryside - a mix of heathland and forest. Hampton Wick was a separate village connected by road. This basically rural environment remained until well into the 19th century. While continuous settlement in Teddington started in Saxon times, there had been significant human activity in the Stone Age: flints have been discovered in the dredging of the Thames. A major Bronze Age barrow was excavated in 1854 where Sandy Lane comes close to the railway. It stood twelve feet high, and there were a few remains; a dagger had survived, and fragments of a large half-baked urn and some calcified bones were also found. The mound disappeared with the construction of the railway in the 1860s.

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A Selection of Memories from Teddington

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 Teddington

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We moved from 76 Princes Road in 1957 to the other end of Teddington, to 143 High Street, opposite Kingston Lane. My parents bought the house for about £1400 (yes fourteen hundred) as a refurb project. It still had gas lighting, which had to be stripped out to install electricity. There were servants bells too. In the 1960s anything Victorian was just considered old-fashioned and grim. My father ...see more
Born in Teddington in 1945. Lived in Clarence Road until 1958, then moved to the "Con Club" in Stanley Road. My brother and I were both in St. Albans Choir along with another pair of brothers, Ian and Cliff Williams, who both now live in Australia. My brother and I live in the USA, Colin in Dallas, Texas and me in Indianapolis, Indiana. Remember Father Simmons and choir master, Norris Marshall. A grand building.