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Evington

Evington photos (1 available)

Old photo of Evington

Evington maps (2 available)

Old map of Evington

Evington books (11 available)

Evington memories

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

Leicestershire memories

schooldays

Oadby, Leicester Road c1955

Going to Mr Allens chemist and walking to Sandhurst street School'also going to the public library over the swimming baths
A memory of Oadby contributed by valerie freeman

Swimming Lessons

As a pupil at Launde School it was compulsory that we were taught to swim at Oadby Swimming baths, for those of you who know Oadby today it wasn't the newly built baths on Brabazon Road, the baths were in the centre of the village, it looked like an old theatre or cinema on first glance.
The boys changing rooms were on the side of the baths themselves the girls were upstairs and across a balcony.
The bath was covered in a glass roof, this would get covered in thick black mould and as you swam or doggy paddled it would plop off the roof into the baths and onto us little swimmers below.
Whatever the weather we walked to the ...read more here
A memory of Oadby contributed by Karen Miller

De Montfort Rocked

Leicester, De Montfort Hall, Regent Road c1955

Good to see DeMontfort Hall as it used to be. It was a great venue to see bands there. Once the small blues clubs had ran their course bands needed larger venues to ply their trade, De Montfort was one of the first, I saw Rory Gallagher, John Hiseman's Collesseum,Yes, Sutherland Brothers/Quiver and never to be forgotten Free (when they reformed briefly) the last band I ever saw before the modernisation of the hall was Uriah Heep with a rather drunk David Byron fronting the band. Other major bands to visit DeMontfort were Genesis, Supertramp and the most under rated bunch of musicians to ever grace these shores The Sensational Alex Harvey Band (God rest his soul)
Today Demontfort is an ...read more here
A memory of Leicester contributed by Mick Austin

Thomas Pritchard , Chief Constable circa 1780's

Leicester, Police Station, Charles Street c1955

My wife Merlyn's great, great, grand uncle, Thomas Pritchard, held the position of Chief Constable in Leicester during the 1770's to 1790's. He had seven sons, and the youngest Thomas migrated to Australia and settled in Bendigo, Victoria in 1850's, as a result of the gold rush. He married a Mary Stevenson, who also was born in Leicester. Thomas joined with a colleague Chamberlain to form Pritchard and Chamberlain, Brewery. His son Thomas Pritchard joined the firm. He was a well known opera singer in Bendigo. He named his house Leicester after his father's birthplace.

A memory of Leicester contributed by James Logan-Bell

Extracts From Evington & Leicestershire books

Leicester, Eastgates and Clock Tower c1950

The pinnacled and canopied Clock Tower, designed by Joseph Goddard in 1868, dominates the forefront of the photograph, while its four stoney local worthies, Simon de Montfort, William Wyggeston, Alderman Gabriel Newton and Sir Thomas White, Mayor of Leicester and mine host at the nearby Horse and Trumpet, gaze down. Beyond Corts Limited can be seen the dominant dome of the Opera House, demolished in 1960, where each year the Christmas pantomime was staged and appreciated with thunderous applause by generations of children.
An extract from from"Leicester Photographic Memories".

Leicester, Granby Street 1949

The link between London Road and Gallowtree Gate, this short north-south road is visually of the later 19th century. The Grand Hotel of 1898 by Cecil Ogden (1858-1944) dominates its southern end, while the rather exuberant Turkey Cafe of 1901 by Arthur Wakerley and the Victoria Coffee House of 1888 by Edward Burgess (fl.1886-1915) add that longed-for touch of eccentricity and quality to an otherwise undistinguished townscape. The shops to the left of the photograph retain their excellent fronts with stall-boards and timber frames, a sight which has become a rarity in a plate-glass world.
An extract from from"Leicester Photographic Memories".

Countesthorpe, Station Road c1965

The road extends to the now defunct railway line as 20th-century Countesthorpe balloons in an amoebic sprawl westwards towards Cosby and Whetstone. In the residual hedgerows and trees lie clues to an 18th-century rural landscape; the enclosures of the 1760s were hated by John Clare, the Northamptonshire poet, for its deleterious effect on the lives of ordinary village people, and for its destruction of the open fields.
An extract from from"Leicester Photographic Memories".

Groby, the Village c1960

A lovely composition of local stone cottages in the lee of the tree-shrouded parish church. They rely on simple but excellent details, such as the timber-bracketed door hood and an unusual cantilevered canted bay window prominent to the right - no incongruous plastic windows and doors in 1960. The modern expansion of Groby as a Leicester suburb is to be glimpsed as the main road swings to the right towards Coalville. In front of the church is a three-storey tower which forms a part of the basically 15th-century Old Hall.
An extract from from"Leicester Photographic Memories".

Kibworth, High Street c1955

Beauchamp was added to the original name of Kibworth through Walter de Beauchamp around 1130. The red brick village, which has expanded to become interesting rather than beautiful, has excellent examples of Leicestershire vernacular, from the 17th-century Stuart House in Station Street to the well-proportioned late 19th- century small houses in the photograph. Kibworth, although large, is a village to see on foot, combining it with Kibworth Harcourt on the opposite side of the A6.
An extract from from"Leicester Photographic Memories".