Sheds at the allotments on Stratford Road with Meon Hill in the background.
Alveston Grange sign. When it was first built the road was known as Red Square among the locals , because of the red brick used to build the houses and the red tarmac used for the road, .
Taken from an upstairs room at No. 8 Bearcroft Gardens, showing the back garden and beyond, the Junior Playing Fields.
Photograph taken from the shelter.
Ballards Close, looking east towards the church.
Play sessions were organised by the Mickleton Community Archive and run by Gloucestershire Play Rangers. They were held in the Kings Arms gardens.
The footpath leads from the High Street to the Junior Playing Field and is now part of the Heart of England Way.
Alveston Grange, a cul-de-sac of modern homes, was built in 1988-89 off the north side of the High Street. The land was formerly the site of Mickleton garages.
Elder Villa stands on the corner of High Street and Mill Bank [now called Mill Lane].
David Moore is the butcher at this time. The shop is situated on the High Street at the junction with Back Lane.
This footpath leads through the kissing gate to the field called The Walk, from where other paths can be followed to the church or up the hills to Kiftsgate and Hidcote.
Field House was completed in 1975, and is in the field behind the old vicarage known as Cowlane orchard.
There is a second, pedestrian entrance to the house on the High Street.
This is at the end of Ivy House Lane and leads on to the field called The Lawn Pasture on the 1840 Tithe Award map.
One of several placed around the village for use by responsible dog owners. This one is on Ivy House Lane that runs between Ivy House and Stoneleigh.
Medford House stands on the High Street at the Junction with Church Lane.
Tudor House is on the west side of the High Street, through to Back Lane.
Elder Villa is in the High Street, on the corner of Mill Lane and opposite the car park of the King's Arms.
Elder Cottage to the rear of Elder Villa, Mill Bank [now Mill Lane]