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Brown Candover

Brown Candover photos (1 available)

Old photo of Brown Candover

Brown Candover maps (2 available)

Old map of Brown Candover

Brown Candover books (13 available)

Brown Candover memories

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You can also read memories of nearby places in Hampshire below.

Hampshire memories

Preston Candover Primary School

This was the year I left PC school to go to High School. I have immensely fond memories of school life here and the wonderful teachers, Mrs Cosier, Mrs Brady and Head Teacher Mrs Bruce. Lining up outside every morning for team games before school. doubtless to wake us up! The whole school chanting our times tables in unison which I think should be mandatory today in all primaries. It works. Singing those glorious old hymns in morning assembly. Having art lessons outside in the sun. Going on nature rambles and nature study competitions (mine was the coot and the horse chestnut tree for which I won a medal). Scottish and country dancing, rounders, tennis and plays performed in the ...read more here
A memory of Preston Candover contributed by Ena Young

Preston Candover School House

Preston Candover, the School c1955

I lived, with my parents and brother and sister, in the 'School House' from 1956-1963. My mother [Mrs Maud Slater] was one of the teachers and taught in the school until her retirement in 1978. The school and house were demolished in 1963/4 when a new school was built. Although for much of my life in PC I was at boarding school /the army I have wonderful memories of my boyhood in the fields and woods around the village and the happy hours spent working, during the harvest, on Manor Farm for 2/- [10p] per hour. My last,passing,visit to PC was in 1997 when I noticed a marked change in the character of the village from agricultural [in ...read more here
A memory of Preston Candover contributed by Sean Slater

I was baptised in this church . . .

Upper Wield, St James' Church 2004

and so was my mum, her dad, his dad, his dad, etc etc.
I was born in Upper Wield in 1949. The churchyard is full of us Giles'

A memory of Upper Wield contributed by Vernon Maldoom

My nan's cottage

Micheldever, Church Street 1951

The cottage in Church St was my nan's, Mrs Elsie Collins, she died about 1969. I remember staying with her when I was little. I haven't been back since she died. I believe a neighbour bought it and converted it into one cottage. I remember the old black range and 2 kettles, little john and big john, and the front door key was about 6 inches long, and granddad going out the back field and collecting mushrooms for breakfast.
A memory of Micheldever contributed by jackie brown

Extracts From Brown Candover & Hampshire books

Raglan, the Church c1955

A little church with a large tower, it is dedicated to St Cadoc, but it is said to have been founded by St David. The 15th-century tower has four pinnacles and large gargoyles leaning out over its panelled buttresses. The Somerset chapel on the left is the last resting place of several of the Earls of Worcester, masters of Raglan Castle.
An extract from from"Around Alton Photographic Memories".

Raglan, Castle Street 1914

The lad may be returning from the castle, which could be approached on this road at that time. The four houses on the right, built in 1817, are now private residences. Two of them still have large windows by their doors to remind us that they used to be the corner stores and Jones’s Refreshment Rooms. Most of the trees remain, but they have been severely cut back.
An extract from from"Around Alton Photographic Memories".

Raglan, High Street 1914

There is documentary evi- dence that the Ship Inn on the left dates from at least 1600, and its cobbled court- yard remains today thanks to a preservation order. Opposite it, Davies & Jones’s store seems to be a meeting- point for the local boys and their bicycles. As the High Street disappears in the dis- tance it becomes the Monmouth Road.
An extract from from"Around Alton Photographic Memories".

Raglan, the Village 1906

The road is Station Road, which today leads to the golf course. The church tower continues to dominate this scene, but the village has grown a lot in the last century, with new schools, new housing and a new surgery.
An extract from from"Around Alton Photographic Memories".

Raglan, the Castle from Moat 1893

The machicolated heights of William Herbert’s gatehouse and closet towers look down on the moat which surrounds the famous Yellow Tower, the work of his father William ap Thomas. King Henry VII spent some of his childhood at Raglan, where the two Williams had transformed a fortified rural manor into a castle fit for a future king.
An extract from from"Around Alton Photographic Memories".