Potters Cross
Potters Cross maps (2 available)
Map of West Midlands
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of West Midlands
Personalised maps
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Potters Cross books (9 available)
- 2 photos on Potters Cross appear in 1 Frith books - View photos of Potters Cross
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Potters Cross and West Midlands
Potters Cross memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in West Midlands below.
West Midlands memories
Where I once lived as a young boy
Lovely to find a photo of the road in which I lived as a young boy. I lived at the Fruit and Vegetable shop (owned by my Uncle Norman Evans) which stood on the corner of Cobden Street and Bridgnorth Road. It can be seen about halfway along the right-hand side of the photo titled Wollaston, Bridgnorth Road 1968. Cobden Street is the turning on the right. I remember opposite Cobden Street was Parke's Bakery who had a shop also in Coventry Street in Stourbridge. The Bus Stop on the right hand side brings back so many memories of visiting my Grandparents in Kinver. My Mother and I would catch the then 250 (Stourbridge to Kinver ...read more here
A memory of Wollaston contributed by Malcolm Atkins
Wordsley Hig Street
Wonderful to see these old photos of Wordsley. Unfortunately not of the shop where I spent the first few years of my life, from 1950.
My parents had a chip shop at 109 High Street, next door to the Cat Inn. Eventually they changed trades and went to fresh fish, then greengrocery, then hardware. Perhaps a few might remember "Bob" Hope and my mom, called Dora. As I walked to school every day (Brook Street Primary) I know the whole road as it used to be. From our shop uphill I remember a little shop owned by an old gentleman (well he seemed old then). He reputedly set fire to the shop, then hanged himself, when I was very young. Can ...read more here
A memory of Wordsley contributed by Jim Hope
The Community Centre
The large building on the right is the Community Centre, built as an art school to improve the standards of design which in the 19th century was very poor, particularly in the glass industry. Opposite was a parade of shops, just out of shot. On the left at the corner of Kinver Street was Whitehouses the butchers, housed in a very old building with a Dutch gable. Farther on was the chemist, double fronted with large glass bottles in each window. Next I think was the bank, followed by the Co-op, and on the corner was Woods the baker. Mr. Wood's son Bob was in my class at Lawnswood Road school, and we were friends until I left to do national ...read more here
A memory of Wordsley contributed by Geoffrey Lowe
Walks with my Dad
This picture is the memorable part of our route, a walk from Belle Vue where I lived until the late fifties. My father would take me for walks on Sundays when the weather was good, which it seemed to be most of the time, we would walk up the common which was then all countryside. We would climb over the stile in the photo and turn up the hill towards the wood, known as the Cally Wood, it was private with no public access. So we we would take another stile which would take us across the fields towards Cot Lane. This was the exciting bit for a six year old as the path crossed the sand pits by a metal ...read more here
A memory of Wordsley contributed by Geoffrey Lowe
Extracts From Potters Cross & West Midlands books
This magnificent clock is made
of iron and has the words ‘This
column was constructed at the
Stourbridge ironworks 1857’ cast
into its base. The company had
been founded in 1800, and the
clock was designed by the works
engineer, William Millward. The
little sign on the railings in front,
however, is an advertisement for
a taxi company.
An extract from from"Stourbridge Living Memories".
Notice that although this
is just a small store for the
immediate suburbs, this
shop also supplied petrol:
there are four pumps on
the left supplying different
types of Esso petrol - Esso
mixture, extra or golden.
The shop is still here, and
so is the petrol station,
although both have grown
in size.
An extract from from"Stourbridge Living Memories".
The shop window has
a display of boats and
a poster asking ‘When
will Alec Rose arrive?’
The photograph must
therefore date from the
summer of 1968, when
Alec Rose, a 59-year-
old greengrocer from
Portsmouth, completed
his single-handed
voyage around the world
in his yacht the ‘Lively
Lady’.
An extract from from"Stourbridge Living Memories".
Along with the nearby Lickey Hills,
the Clent Hills (which rise to 1,000
ft above sea level) form a clear
boundary between rural countryside
to the south and west and the man-
made industrial landscape to the
north-east. There is a toposcope just
beside the Four Stones which was
erected in 1929 by the Rotary Clubs
of Stourbridge and Kidderminster.
An extract from from"Stourbridge Living Memories".
Frequently known as ‘the Lye’, this small town has been described as ‘the last place God ever made’, apparently
because so much of it was once waste ground! The first people to live here built their houses from mud (the area
later became an important centre for brick production), so that Lye came to be known as the ‘Mud City’.
An extract from from"Stourbridge Living Memories".





