The shop can be seen in the background with Myrtle House next to it.
Brick barbecue constructed for an ox-roast in the road by the Plantation, June 1977. This was probably part of the village celebrations of the Queen's Silver Jubilee. The house called Chestnuts can be seen behind.
The photographs show the small ceremony held for the winners of the Bledisloe Cup Best Kept Village trophy in 1996 and the Parish Council Chairman, Brin Kibblewhite, receiving the award on behalf of the village. Sadly, the three magnificent chestnut trees that had graced the Plantation had been felled shortly before. The remaining trunk of one ...
This photograph was taken when the chestnut trees on the plantation was being felled. They were deemed to be unsafe.
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.
Snow covering the Three Ways and Plantation. Taken from the High Street.
The sign was erected on the Plantation, in the centre of the village, and was awarded to Mickleton as winners of the Bledisloe Cup for the Best Kept Village in 1961. The competition was organised by the Council for the Preservation of Rural England.
This is built against the wall of the Three Ways Hotel at the Plantation in the centre of the village. The shelter originally had an oak bench running all around the interior. This photograph shows a mural painted on the back wall. Bus stops are now on the main road so the building has lost ...
An old postcard sent from Stroud in 1950. It shows the Plantation, the shop and Myrtle House, then a thriving bed and breakfast business.
This image shows the back of the fountain at the Plantation where the CPRE Bledisloe Cup Plaques for the best kept village in Gloucestershire hang for everyone to see.
The Fountain at the centre of the village on the Plantation. see also The Fountain - a History
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.
View of the Plantation showing the octagonal oak memorial seat that was built around the chestnut tree to celebrate the Festival of Britain in 1951 On the right of the figures grouped around the signpost is the village shop, then owned by the Co-op (Cooperative Wholesale Society). The index to the original WI slide collection refers to ...
The date that this photograph was taken is unknown except that it was before the trees on the Plantation were cut down.
The Plantation and fountain in the centre of the village with The Three Ways House Hotel, formerly called St. Lawrence House, Mickleton Lodge, Seaton Lea and The Three Ways. The Chestnut trees on the Plantation have since been felled.
Three Ways Hotel and Plantation in the snow in January 1982.