Compiled by Mickleton Women's Institute in 1970s: W side of Mill Bank, through to Hobb's Alley. Camera facing SE. View across land now used for market gardening, enclosed between Mill Bank and Hobb's Alley - when Mr Wyatt farmed the land in the early years of this century he had a right to drive his sheep through here ...
Compiled by Mickleton Women's Institute: On the W side of Mill Bank which runs from High Street to Chapel Lane. Camera facing NW Listed: 3/14 II C17 Rubble. Cotswold stone roof. 1 and 2s. Gables and dormers. 3- and 4- light stone mullion ws with dripmoulds. Since the List was compiled, the later part of this house has been ...
Indexed by the W.I. as Mill Bank. It is now called Mill Lane.
New houses behind Greyrick. The development is called Greyrick Court.
Compiled by members of Mickleton Women's Institute in 1970s: On E side of Milking Pail Lane, corner of Church Alley, camera facing SE. Once two cottages, made into one in 1809. (Deeds of King's Arms seen in archives of Flower's Brewery at the Shakespeare Centre, Stratford-upon-Avon). ?First half of C18. Stone to window sills, brick above; front, ...
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.
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.
The title of this slide in the original index was followed by '(inc. Scout Hut)'. Is that the building on the right hand side?
Photograph taken from outside Tudor House.
Looking towards Pound Lane.
The description of this photograph in the index accompanying the slide collection has 'butcher's shop at R H'. What does this mean?
The cottage had been previously called Nimdene, named after a horse. The little boy is Fred Brown.
Builder was identified in the index to the original slide collection as Dudley Jarrett.
No. 3 Meon Road decorated by owners, Allen and Beatrice Kitchen, as part of the village celebrations of the wedding of Prince Charles to Lady Diana Spencer.
No. 3, Meon Road decorated by owners, Allen and Beatrice Kitchen, as part of the village celebrations of the wedding of Prince Charles to Lady Diana Spencer on 29th July 1981.