Farley Green
Farley Green maps (2 available)
Farley Green books (26 available)
- 2 photos on Farley Green appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Farley Green
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Farley Green and Suffolk
Farley Green memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in Suffolk below.
Suffolk memories
A Ham Family
My mother and father lived in Evelyn Road - the cul-de-sac opposite the large white house in the distance - mother still there - lived in two of the houses for all her eighty years - married the boy next door (well.. at the top of the cul- de- sac!).
I'm 53 and it is how I remember itn into the early 1960s - Elson the grocer on the right, the shop on the right became the Co-Op, the central shop was Frank Birch the Butcher next to Dunkley's sweet shop where I worked as a lad.
I can see the faces now!
Left in 1980 and back to see Mum a number of times per year.
A fantastic place to ...read more here
A memory of Ham contributed by John Clifford
The Bakery, Tatsfield
Hi
My family ( The Watsons) owned the bakery which was a substantial building in the village centre. It housed the bakery itself ( My Uncle Dick Watson was the baker in those days) It was also a hotel with six bedrooms, plus it had a shop on the front corner, shown in the above photo.
I was 12 years of age at the time and used to visit my Grandad Watson in the long, triangulated room above the shop. He was well into his 80's in those days.
I am now 63 and live in nearby Westerham.
My Dad owned "Tatsfield Garage", 150 yards down Paynesfield Road from where the photo was taken in fact. My only brother Tony still ...read more here
A memory of Tatsfield contributed by Barry Watson
riddlesdown shops
It was so good to see the photos, the memories came flooding back. When I was a child I too used to go for walks on the downs and into Kenley. I lived in Derwent Drive near what was then called Riddlesdown Secondary Modern School. The shops we used to go to at Riddlesdown. My mother would send us there every Saturday to buy 2 loaves of bread. Then when I was older I worked in the hairdressers called "Hazels". Thankyou Liz for your memories, I wonder if we know each other? Yvonne Slater.
A memory of Riddlesdown contributed by yvonne slater
Riddlesdown in the 1950's
We lived in Dale Road, right near the bottom of Downscourt Road and we spent a lot of time on Riddlesdown because it was near to where we lived. When we got a bit older, we used to walk along the downs towards Kenley or maybe even further along where there was a railway crossing. We used to get pennies and put them on the rails and wait for a train to come along and squash them. That was in the days were children could go anywhere they liked. We used to go up to the downs by ourselves and so long as we were back for tea or supper, it didn't matter what we did.
A memory of Riddlesdown contributed by Liz Williams
Extracts From Farley Green & Suffolk books
Houses lie to either
side of the lane that
runs through Farley
Green, but it is the
nearby heath where
man once made his
home. During the
mid 19th century,
the writer Martin
Tupper exposed a
fine Romano-British
temple. Later digs
by others discovered
coins and pottery, and
in 1995 the first proper
excavation was made
by English Heritage.
An extract from from"Villages of Surrey Photographic Memories".
Farley Green is situated
towards the south end of
Albury parish, and its fields are
carved out of the surrounding
greensand woods. The hamlet
is centred upon a long hour-
glass-shaped green; this view
was taken at its north end,
with Shophouse Lane on the
right and August Lane on the
left. The 1920s Elm Tree
Cottage on the left is now
partly hidden by a large beech
tree, while the 19th-century
cottages behind the pillar box
(which is still there today) have
an extra bay to the right.
An extract from from"Surrey Living Memories".
This view, taken from
Stonecot Hill, shows the
1930s Woodstock pub,
which still flourishes.
It is now different in
appearance, as most
of the ground floor has
been painted, including
the right hand bay
window. One brick
gate pier is still intact,
although without the
lamp.
An extract from from"Sutton Photographic Memories".
This scene is of
Banstead Downs, which are
actually outside Sutton’s
boundaries, south of Belmont
station. The clubhouse of the
Banstead Downs Golf Club is
seen in the distance. Between
the golfers and the clubhouse
was Burdon Lane, which until
the 1950s joined the Brighton
Road as it crossed the Downs
by way of a dangerous blind
junction. However, this stretch
was later closed and became a
path, so that golfers today no
longer have to cross a road to
get to their clubhouse.
An extract from from"Sutton Photographic Memories".
View 49180 looks west from
the junction with Langley Park
Road along Christchurch Park,
with the well-known copper
beech trees newly planted
in the verges. This view,
however, looks northwards
from fields. These have
long since been built over,
and were situated where
Devonshire Avenue is now. All
these houses have now gone,
to be replaced by blocks of
flats.
An extract from from"Sutton Photographic Memories".







