View showing the Fountain and Plantation on the left and Myrtle House, the Village Store and the black and white thatched cottages on the right.
Compiled by Mickleton Women's Institute in the 1970s: S side of Chapel Lane, next to Methodist Hall. Camera facing E. Date not known. Formerly 2 cottages. Timber with brick in-filling. Probably thatched originally, now tiled. 3 dormers at front and one at back above eaves line. 2 s[torey]. Windows, some original 2-light wrought iron frames, one side-hung, one ...
Offering bed and breakfast accommodation.
Compiled by Mickleton Women's Institute in 1970s: W side of Chapel Lane, opposite Mill Bank. Camera facing NW. Rubble to top of ground floor windows (at this level there is an exposed beam in the RHS and wall). Upper store rendered. Slate roof. It can be seen inside that the roof has been raised and appearance from Mill ...
A medical practice was here at one time.
This house was used as a doctors' surgery.
This house was used as the doctors' surgery.
Chestnut Cottage is on the High Street, between the shop and the Manor. A note in the index compiled to accompany the original slide collection reads, 'The ___ good accommodation for cyclists'. Is this what the sign says?
Compiled by Mickleton Women's Institute during the 1970s: High Street, E side, next to Myrtle House. Camera facing E. About 1883. Manor estate house built in Mr Sidney Graves-Hamilton's time. Rubble. Gabled. Roof tiled. 3 dormers across eaves line. Central dormer projects slightly. 2 s[torey]. Windows 2 - and 3 - light mullions, dripmoulds, one stone bay under ...
View of the church, vicarage and its old coach house from the vicarage garden.
Church lane, from the High Street end looking towards the Vicarage, with the Manor on the left, the wall of Medford House on the right and April Cottage [white cottage] on the right.
Description by Mickleton Women's Institute: May 1975, camera facing E. This photograph was taken simply to show the curved boundary wall of Medford House and the glimpse of the Manor at the end of Church Lane, a view we hope will not be sacrificed to the needs of heavy lorry traffic on this dangerous bend in the ...
Mrs Clarke outside her cottage, Cosycot in Gloucester Lane, reputed to be the oldest cottage in Mickleton.
The gardens of Cotswold House now demolished. Cotswold House was butted up to the back of Richmond House. It was demolished in the late 1980s and Chandos House was built on the site in 1990s.
Cotswold House on the left and Richmond House on the right. Cotswold House was demolished in the 1980s and Chandos House now stand on the site.
Two cottages standing at the junction of Tadpole, Gloucester Lane, Broad Marston Lane and Chapel Lane. Cotswold Edge can be seen in the distance.
Betty Clark, aged two, photographed in the back garden of one of the cottages.
Black and white cottages on the High Street. The one on the left has been demolished.
Helen Dornan is standing at the front door at the side of Tadpole Cottage. Helen lived at Tadpole Cottage from 1999-2002. Tadpole Cottage was built before 1936; it was a worker's cottage for Brain's at Cherry Orchard.
Elder Villa is in the High Street, on the corner of Mill Lane and opposite the car park of the King's Arms.
Elder Villa stands on the corner of High Street and Mill Bank [now called Mill Lane].