Betty Clark, aged two, photographed in the back garden of one of the cottages.
Fish being delivered to the Milking Pail public house by a man with a donkey cart. Stephen Cowley was licensee at the time.
Compiled by members of Mickleton Women's Institute in 1970s: On W side of Milking Pail Lane, off High Street opposite Mickleton Garage, camera facing NW. Original cottage rubble stone, extension at N end in brick. Roof now all tiled but older part originally thatched. Half timbered gable at S end, one dormer. 2s. Casement windows. Fire Insurance ...
Renovated in 1978. It lies off the High Street in Milking Pail Lane.
20mph speed limit following re-surfacing work.
The group are in Milking Pail Lane.
Photograph taken in Milking Pail Lane. From left to right: Horace Kinchin (by wagon), Wing Commander Rayner Booth, shopkeeper Mr Morris, Wally Brain (bending), ?, George Bayliss (on pump) and Len Lester (hose end).
Standing on left is Ethel Collett, seated on right is her older sister, Florence [later Mrs Jack Bennett]. The other two are Cowley sisters, Annie Beatrice and Alice Rosina. The Cowleys lived at the Milking Pail and the Collet family next door at Hidcote Cottage. Written on the reverse of the photograph [produced as a ...
Compiled by members of Mickleton Women's Institute in 1970s: End of Milking Pail Lane on the corner of Church Alley, camera facing SE. Cottage, probably C18. Brick now rendered, slate roof. Part 2s part 3s. Ws 2 - and 3 - light wooden frames, single side-hung casement, all under shallow brick arch. But ground-floor window at front ...
Milking Pail Lane is off the High Street on the south side and opposite Alveston Grange. The photo shows The Milking Pail and, on the right, Lamb House. Both are now houses but were pubs in the past. One resident has always called the little road, Lawson Square.
Stephen Cowley, in the centre, was licensee of the Milking Pail pub. This photograph was lent to Mickleton Women's Institute by Mrs Florence Bennett who had written 'August House Party' on the reverse. She grew up next door, in Hidcote Cottage, and her family and the Cowley family were great friends.
Public house at far end of Lawson Square run, at the time of this photograph, by Stephen Cowley. The girl on the far left is Florence Collett [her family were living at neighbouring Hidcote Cottage] and next to her is Annie Beatrice Cowley. The occasion is not known but the girls and their mothers seem to be ...
With the entrance to Church Alley on the left.
An identical photograph to another which was described in the original index as 'Fish Delivery at the Milking Pail'. The information in the index for this image identifies the man on the donkey cart as Mr. Booker, a rag and bone man. He was collecting rabbit skins for which he paid 3d. Others identified as ...
Shows Stephen Cowley (Licensee) and his family and a cartload of barrels being delivered.
The Milking Pail had become a private house by the time this photograph was taken [1960/70s?]