Mr and Mrs F. Mills lived at Cotswold House ( now demolished) which stood next to Richmond House . The photo shows Mrs Mills.
Building work being carried out. The cottage was named after a racehorse but is now called Honeysuckle Cottage. It stands on the junction of Milking Pail Lane with the High Street.
Ann Clark photographed at the back of Nimdene in 1943. The cottage is now called Honeysuckle Cottage. It stands on the junction of Milking Pail Lane with the High Street.
No. 10 Bearcroft Gardens under construction by DeltaVale Homes in 1993.
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.
Description written by member's of Mickleton W.I. Corner of High Street, W side, opposite Manor Wall. Camera facing N. Now known as Richmond House. Listed see 'Old Post Office - a history'. This end of the house is gabled. Cotswold House which stood at right angles to this end wall was demolished in 1969 and the land taken in with ...
Description compiled by members of W.I. c. 1975 Corner of High Street, W side, opposite the Manor Wall. Now known as Richmond House. Listed: 3/7A III. House. C 17/18. Stone. Welsh slate roof. 2 s[torey]. 4ws. (3 - and 4 - light stone mullions and dripmoulds, some blocked). Flate arched moulded stone doorway. This end of the roof is ...
In the 1950s the building on Back Lane also served as a classroom with the school kitchen built on the right hand side. The kitchen was demolished when the dining hall was converted to a dwelling in 2008. The house is now called The Old School Hall reflecting its previous use.
This is at the top of Ivy House Lane. The building was converted into a dwelling house in about 2014 but retains much of the original. Meon Hill can be seen in the background.
These renovated old cottages on the High Street are probably the most photographed houses in the centre of the village. From right to left they are called
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 ...
New Pillars at the entrance to the Old Vicarage, Church Lane
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.
An old, stamped but not franked, postcard showing the thatched cottages in the centre of the village along with others that have since been demolished. Taken from outside Tudor House looking towards Church Lane.
Postcard image showing the black and white thatched cottages in the centre of the village. On reverse the person who bought the card has written: Bought 10.7.57 Seen 20.7.57.
Description written by Mickleton W.I. c.1970: End of Hobb's Alley, W side, next to Tadpole. The cottage before alteration, see 'Orchard Cottage - a history'.
After renovation. The cottage lies at the Tadpole end of Hobbs Alley.
Situated at Tadpole. This was said to have originally been two cottages. Mr and Mrs Stowe and three children are standing in front of the cottage.
Description written by Mickleton W.I. in c.1970 End of Hobb's Alley, W side, next to Tadpole, land going through to Gloucester Lane. Camera facing W. Listed: 3/13 III. Half timber cottage with thatched roof and casement ws. Formerly two cottages, the roof has been raised to give additional windows and the whole re-thatched.
Held as part of the village's celebration of the marriage of HRH Charles, Prince of Wales to Lady Diana Spencer which took place on 29th July 1981. The houses, Chestnuts and Chestnut Cottage, can be seen in the background. Clive Porter, the butcher, in the chefs hat was in charge of the Ox roast.