From L-R: Rowland Bennett, Aubrey Harper, Margaret Hutchinson nee Kinchin, Graham [Tracker] Mills, Ted [Chippy] Davis. The owner at this time was Mr Rosamund.
Garden Cottage is on the north side of the High Street, opposite Ballards Close and stands at right angles to the High Street.
Garden Cottage, Big Garden off High Street
Compiled by members of Mickleton Women's Institute in 1970s: In Garden Close on the N side of High Street opposite Ballard's Close, camera facing E. Date not known so far but new owner is making enquiries. Timber with some in-filling brick, some plaster. Formerly thatched, now tiled. 3 gabled dormers above eaves line, 2s. Windows 2-light in one ...
Garden Cottage in Big Garden off High street used to be a vegetable shop.
Camera facing N. Listed, see details 'Granbrook Farm - a history'. The main chimney.
Compiled by Mickleton Women's Institute in 1970s: 190 yards NE of Tudor House, end of High Street, N side, near The Butts. Listed: 3/12 II House. C17. Rubble. Cotswold stone roof. 2 s[torey], 3 gables. 3ws. (2- and 3- light mullions and dripmoulds). Four-centred arched chamfered stone doorway. Impossible to take photograph of full front because of wall ...
Postcard showing five views of Mickleton named as Medford House, High Street, Three Ways Hotel, Old World Cottages and St Lawrence. The card was never sent but written on the reverse is "June 11th 1957. Visited with Brewood Bell-ringers".
On 22nd July 2008 the Hedgehog community bus was parked for a time in the car park of the King's Arms as part of a publicity campaign to make more villagers aware of its services and to recruit new drivers.
Photograph shows the bus travelling along the High Street.
Photograph shows the bus on the High Street.
Photo of the High Street taken from a newspaper article in the Evesham Journal when Mickleton won the Bledisloe Cup in 1961.
View of the High Street with the shop and Myrtle House on the right and the Fountain on the left.
The butcher's shop and Holly Mount can be seen on the left and White Cottage, Wykum and the terraced cottages making up Tudor View on the right.
View looking north east along the High Street. On the left is Tudor House. The black and white cottage on the right is Will-Ann.
View of the High Street, facing east, with the village shop on the right and the Plantation on the left.
View of the High Street, facing east with Mill Lane junction on left. The index to the original slide collection describes this as Evesham Road. When did this change?
The cottage on the left was demolished in about the late 1960s. Miss Emma Bennett, a dressmaker, lived in it during the 1950s. This image appears, originally, to have been on a postcard.
These much photographed cottages are now four in number, from left to right, Will-Ann, ?, ? and Peddar's Way, but in the past this has varied and at one time, they were just one house.