New Milton
New Milton maps (2 available)
New Milton books (13 available)
- 2 photos on New Milton appear in 1 Frith books - View photos of New Milton
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on New Milton and Hampshire
New Milton memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in Hampshire below.
Hampshire memories
My whole life
I have lived in Everton my whole life. I love the village. I am a respectable citizen of Everton and have lived for nearly 18 years in Frys Lane.
I hope other people enjoy the atmosphere as much as I do.
Makeala x
A memory of Everton contributed by Makeala Wheatcroft
The Hut
My grandmother, Ellen Jane St. John, owned a cottage/cabin/ex-WWI Army Hut, appropriately called The Hut on Westover Road and it was my job when first arriving from Southamton in her Standard 8 car to cut the grass. Being a large area, for my young size, it took half-a-day to complete the task. There was no electricity, the place being lit with paraffin lamps when night fell. Besides walking along the beach to see what destruction the latest storm had wrecked and washed up, I loved to catch lizards as they basked in the sun on the bank that ran along Westover Road. Another enjoyment was helping the milkman deliver his milk early in the morning on the horse-and-cart. Sadly all good ...read more here
A memory of Milford On Sea contributed by Michael Gale
visits with my auntie Joan
I loved this charming village, I remember the 'fishmonger' and the 'greengrocer' bringing their wares from door to door with their 'horsedrawn' carts (yes, even in 1956). I used to walk her dog with auntie Joan to this very post office to mail letters and get 'bits and pieces". Auntie Joan always loved the small country places, she lived in many places like this because of her husband's work.
I had the privelage of visiting all her 'little hidaways' throughout England and Scotland.
A memory of Bransgore contributed by deborah rowsell
Parcels
The Post Office brings back many happy memories. In 1954 to 1957 I served in the RAF at Sopley. Some of us would walk to the Post Office to send letters home & meet friends we had made in the village. If anyone remembers the good times we had...
Thankyou. - B Haywood
A memory of Bransgore contributed by brian haywood
Extracts From New Milton & Hampshire books
Milton’s church tower is nearly four hundred years old, though the rest of the building is more recent. Inside is a monument to the soldier Thomas White, who died in 1720 after faithful service to four monarchs.
An extract from from"New Forest Photographic Memories".
The cliffs south of Milton are renowned for the profusion of fossils to be found. Examples can be seen in local museums and at the Natural History Museum in London.
An extract from from"New Forest Photographic Memories".
This famous firm was developed from a combination of various
Romsey breweries in the latter part of the 19th century, when
rail transport made it possible to carry beer over considerable
distances. Strong’s became one of the main employers in the
town for about a hundred years, but the need for modernisation
caused brewing to cease in 1981; the operation, by that time
part of Whitbread Wessex, was finally closed in 1990. Part of the
site has been cleared, but the main buildings, some converted
to offices, remain — the heritage of late 19th-century and early
20th-century builders.
An extract from from"Romsey Town and City Memories".
With nine mill sites in the town, many enterprises used water to
power the machinery necessary for their businesses — corn, paper,
and cloth-fulling mills, saw mills, and tanneries. Most written material
about Romsey’s mills seems to relate to problems in obtaining that
most important item — water. Romsey’s mills depended on the
river Test and its branches for their power. Competition was keen,
and resulted in many legal disputes arising from millers upstream
diverting the water from those downstream.
There was a series of disputes in Tudor times at Sadler’s Mill: its
owner suffered from the work of millers upstream, who
‘with divers and sondrie lewde and desperate persons ... erected a
pilinge over athwart the mayne Channel of the Ryver and thereby
stopped turned and diverted the said Mayne River of Terste out of
his aunciente and common Course ...’
Troubles of this kind continued through the following centuries,
providing the legal profession with a steady source of income. As
late as the early 20th century, wooden stakes were still being placed
incorrectly to control the water flow. At that time, photographic
evidence was offered in court; an unfortunate river keeper was shown
standing in the faulty area to demonstrate the depths.
An extract from from"Romsey Town and City Memories".
All these roads are similar. The rough
roads have all been paved. Almost all
the houses are detached, and often
individually designed. The Local Area
Committee of the Borough Council is
doing its best to maintain the special
ambiance of the district. However, it is
a sad fact that developers are begin-
ning to nibble at any open spaces for
the building of flats. There is a Tree
Preservation Order covering this area,
which we may hope will prevent the
destruction of most of the trees.
An extract from from"Around Eastleigh including Chandler's Ford, Bishopstoke and Botley Living Memories".





