Linslade
Linslade maps (2 available)
Map of Bedfordshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
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Linslade books (5 available)
Linslade memories
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Bedfordshire memories
Australians On The Cut -1975
Having left Australia on an open-ended working holiday to England in January, 1974 with my girlfriend, it was hard to imagine that within six weeks of arriving in London we'd be living on a leaky old narrow boat in Braunston near Rugby, and that six months later - still living on the boat - we'd be calling Leighton Buzzard home for nearly two years.
The boat was called SADLERS WELLS, and in the opinion of most people, she looked more like a railway carriage than a traditional narrow boat, obviously the result of some DIY conversion of years gone by. She became ours for two hundred pounds after answering an ad in Exchange and Mart. Work opportunities in ...read more here
A memory of Leighton Buzzard contributed by Ross Barnard
Shop names and trades.
The buildings from left to right are the Post Office with Drakelow Press printing and bookbinding firm in buildings above and behind it. Established prior to 1827 by a Stephen Dodd, in 1951 it became known as Drakelow Press. The there is the Black Horse pub, a wool/haberdashery shop, a grocery shop, Gibbs and Dandy Ironmongers which was a treasure trove of nails, screws, string, buckets, mops etc. Then on the corner a cafe.
A memory of Woburn contributed by Mrs Sylvia Hudson
Shop names and trades.
The buildings from left to right are an antique shop, then a sweet shop that was full of the most delightful assortment of sweets all in glass jars and weighed out on brass scales into white paper bags. Then Dudeney and Johnston the grocers - they had man who went around the villages on his bicycle one day a week taking grocery orders which were then delivered by van to your door. The door with a canopy and small windows either side is a Bank, then Mr Jones's shoe shop. I think the two buildings leading to the corner were private houses. The double fronted building on the far right was a cafe.
A memory of Woburn contributed by Mrs Sylvia Hudson
Buildings.
The buildings featured from left to right - (I do not know the history of the white house), then there are the pillars which are the entrance to the churchyard and mortuary chapel. The church, built in 1865, was used until 1980 for funerals only. It was then declared redundant and turned into a Heritage Centre. In the churchyard which is still used are the graves of several Second World War Canadian, Polish and English soldiers. Woburn Primary School is just around the curve in this photo. The entrance door is set in a wall and can be missed unless you know it is the school. Woburn School has a very long history having been ...read more here
A memory of Woburn contributed by Mrs Sylvia Hudson
Extracts From Linslade & Bedfordshire books
The coming of firstly the Grand Union Canal and then the railways, led to the establishment of modern Linslade
at its present location. The place name dates back to the 11th century, but the original village fell into disuse and
no trace of it remains today. Until 1966, Linslade was a small, mainly Victorian town located in Buckinghamshire.
Local government boundary changes brought Leighton Buzzard and Linslade together into the town of Leighton-
Linslade and placed them both in Bedfordshire. The River Ouzel - the original boundary between the counties
- divides the jointly-named town.
An extract from from"Bedfordshire Living Memories".
FEW PEOPLE would be shocked by the
idea of a national poll, conducted by Idler
magazine, discovering that Luton was Britain’s
‘crappiest town’. Luton stands out, according
to the study, because it is incredibly ugly
and has a sense of neglected isolation. Well,
beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but what
is neglected isolation? Clearly there is some
kind of insinuation that Luton is not cool, it’s
not with the latest trends in ‘Cool Britannia.’
Leaders of popular culture have a stupefying
arrogance, loathing any sort of individuality;
they are able to dish out criticism, but not
to take it. Luton is about people, whatever
the buildings look like. One must admit that
modern towns are unbearably look-alike,
but none look like Luton. Maybe it is this
uniqueness that critics cannot stand. That is
not to say there are not problems here, but
these are challenging times across the globe.
No place is really isolated. As for neglected,
that is not Luton’s fault. Like so much of the
south-east, the government wants to pack
the people in, but it does not want to pay the
price in infrastructure.
The meaning of isolation in the town’s
distant past is easier to understand.
Communications were slow, and neglect
was not an issue. Folk just got on with
the business of survival. Hunter gatherers
(evidence for their presence is Worthington
Smith’s discovery of Palaeolithic flint tools
in the 19th century) made their home
250,000 years ago beside hillside lakes.
Neolithic, or New Stone Age, men arrived
from France and the Rhine, crossing the
nascent channel on rafts. They brought
cattle, seed corn and pottery.
(Robert Cook)
We are looking across Luton in its Chiltern setting from the Eaton Farm location, which became the airport.
An extract from from"Luton - A History & Celebration".
William brought with him 5,000 knights,
the new aristocracy. When he died the
country was still 90% Saxon; the Normans’
policy, like the Romans’, was ‘divide and
rule’, with the majority of England’s two
million people subject to the Norman fist.
His successor, Henry II, gave the manor of
Luton to his illegitimate son Robert, Earl of
Gloucester, and a new church was built south
of the present St Mary’s. Henry also gave land
to the monks to build a hospital and chapel
on Farley Hill. Another hospital, the House
of God of the Virgin Mary, was founded by
Thomas Beckett on a hill between the old
Vauxhall car factory and Luton Airport.
An extract from from"Luton - A History & Celebration".
Contagious Diseases Acts were passed to
deal with all manner of problems arising
from people living in highly populated areas
like Luton. Edwin Chadwick was in charge of
the government campaign to sanitize towns
and cities by cleaning up the water supply and
trying to improve the habits of the growing
populace. Religion had its own methods for
cheering up the poor, but William Booth’s
Salvation Army was an innovation, aiming
to reach out to them by entering the dens of
iniquity and trying to change lives. That was
a hard task in a town facing major threats
to its livelihood. Things had to change. The
railways would at least make it easier for
people to move elsewhere in search of a job,
or vice versa if Luton’s fortune changed.
The town’s two stations were built side by
side, but the Bute Street link to Dunstable
was closed during the short-sighted Marples
era at the Transport Ministry in the 1960s -
Ernest Marples employed his scientist friend
Dr Beeching to take an axe to as many rail
routes as possible. The consequences in traffic
congestion between Luton and Dunstable are
all too obvious.
Non-conformist religious groups were
fierce in their advocacy of total abstinence.
They played a significant role in getting some
of the worst local pubs closed down through
(Robert Cook)
The Brewery Tap dates back to the 17th century. It stood next to a tithe barn until shops were built to meet the
town’s changing requirements.
An extract from from"Luton - A History & Celebration".
IN SPITE of the depression, the town’s
population grew to 36,404 in 1901, and the
town grew richer. The Liberal mayor Edwin
Oakley, who gained office in 1891, was far-
sighted; he sensed that Luton’s future and
prosperity depended on new industries and
better infrastructure. Rapid expansion meant
that jerry-building was inevitable (it is thought
that the term may derive from the poorly built
walls of biblical Jericho, which were so easily
knocked down by Joshua’s army);
this would build up problems later
on. Health problems were endemic.
Although the population reached
50,000 by 1911, men’s life expectancy
was only 52 years and women’s
55. Infant mortality was very high,
with working parents having little
knowledge of what was best for their
offspring or money to make good
provision for them. Typhoid, scarlet
fever, whooping cough, tuberculosis
and diphtheria were rife.
As the population grew, so did
the need for public services. Balfour’s
Education Act of 1902 placed
‘board schools’ under borough or
county councils (Local Education
Authorities), authorizing them to
establish secondary and technical
schools as well as to develop
the existing elementary schools.
Bedfordshire County Council took
over education in 1902, and it was
hoped that the Higher Grade School
would serve Luton’s growing needs.
At the time, boys were travelling to
Dunstable, Bedford and St Albans. The new
Luton Modern School opened in 1908. Built
on the site of the White House in Park Square,
it was originally called the Edward VII School;
it was renamed the Technical School in 1938.
The steel magnate Andrew Carnegie added to
the educational infrastructure by providing
the town with a magnificent new library
building in 1910 opposite the town hall at the
entrance to Manchester Street.
An extract from from"Luton - A History & Celebration".





