Originally this was the front of the vicarage and the front door was where the bottom centre window is now. It is thought that the change was made in Victorian times and a new entrance with a porch was built on to the front.
The Old Vicarage is a Georgian house built in 1805 directly opposite the church. Originally the front door was on the other side of the house but the porch and room above are said to have been added in Victorian times and became the front entrance.
Compiled by members of Mickleton Women's Institute in 1970s: High St, N side, opposite Medford House May 1975, camera facing NE Date plaque, raised lettering, on S end stone gable end. Assuming the arrangement of letters indicate it is possible that the following entry in the Marriage Register might relate to the owner of this house: Perkes, Thomas and ...
View of the centre of the village on a postcard posted at Lower Quinton on 7th September 1901. The village shop can be seen on the right.
The first cottage on the left hand side is now known as Willann. The end part of it was a butcher's shop at one time. The first on the right hand side is called Peddar's Way.
Photograph taken between 1914-1918.
Large cellar below the sitting-room with areas for storing bottles & dairy produce and hooks in the ceiling for hanging meat and game.
In the walled courtyard behind the old coach house - now a garage - and outside the kitchen, there is a well, which presumably supplied water to the house. There is also a pump, which is no longer working. In 2011, a pair of robins built their nest in vegetation growing on the inner wall of ...
Nurse at her cottage gate. The boy is identified as Lewes Kinchin. Next to him is Mrs Harper [grandmother of Bessie Clark, who gave the original photograph to the WI], then Alice Mills (nee Kinchin) in the arms of her mother, Mrs Frances Kinchin. [Editor's note: Alice Rosina Kinchin, daughter of John Kinchin, a gardener, and his ...
Showing Three Ways House in Chapel Lane before it became a hotel. Previous names were St Lawrence's, Salford House and Seaton Lea.
Shows Tudor House at the time it was the village post office, circa.1900.
Miss Hammond is photographed outside her cottage.
An identical photograph to another which was described in the original index as 'Fish Delivery at the Milking Pail'. The information in the index for this image identifies the man on the donkey cart as Mr. Booker, a rag and bone man. He was collecting rabbit skins for which he paid 3d. Others identified as ...
Shows Stephen Cowley (Licensee) and his family and a cartload of barrels being delivered.
Public house at far end of Lawson Square run, at the time of this photograph, by Stephen Cowley. The girl on the far left is Florence Collett [her family were living at neighbouring Hidcote Cottage] and next to her is Annie Beatrice Cowley. The occasion is not known but the girls and their mothers seem to be ...
Stephen Cowley, in the centre, was licensee of the Milking Pail pub. This photograph was lent to Mickleton Women's Institute by Mrs Florence Bennett who had written 'August House Party' on the reverse. She grew up next door, in Hidcote Cottage, and her family and the Cowley family were great friends.
Probably the North Cotswold Hunt who regularly met at The Kings Arms in this period.