The Francis Frith Collection.
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2008 Christmas Gift Guide - great gifts for your family and friends

Whittlesey

Whittlesey photos (15 available)

Old photo of Whittlesey

Whittlesey maps (2 available)

Old map of Whittlesey

Whittlesey books (10 available)

Whittlesey memories

Bricklayers Arms

Researching my family history I have found the sale papers for the Bricklayers Arms. It was sold by my Great Grandmother, her husband was Frederick Easom Robinson. It was sold on Friday 8th august 1890. The sale was for Brewhouse Blacksmiths & Wheelwright shops, two Brick Built & Slated Tenements, an orchard, and 4 acres of land intersected by the railway, formerly the Brick Yard.
Contributed by Myrtle Neville

Cambridgeshire memories

Bricklayers Arms

Researching my family history I have found the sale papers for the Bricklayers Arms. It was sold by my Great Grandmother, her husband was Frederick Easom Robinson. It was sold on Friday 8th august 1890. The sale was for Brewhouse Blacksmiths & Wheelwright shops, two Brick Built & Slated Tenements, an orchard, and 4 acres of land intersected by the railway, formerly the Brick Yard.
A memory of Whittlesey contributed by Myrtle Neville

childhood memory

Eye, Crowland Road c1960

The old photographs helped me remember some lovely memories of when I was a very young child, when it was a daily routine walking past the old brick works to go to Eye school,  I believe that just past the brick works  (obviously depending on which way you were walking) there was a bridge that went over the old railway.
My father Sid Earnshaw knew Bill Oliver who worked at the site and his brother Ray, sadly my father is no longer here, but the pictures were wonderful to see, and I cannot help but feel a little sad that Eye now looks nothing like it was when I was a child, but thats progress I suppose!!  Although it's not all ...read more here

Crowland Road

Eye, Crowland Road c1960

My uncle, Bill Oliver, who lived in Crowland Road used to work at the brickyards pictured. He worked on the kilns. I can remember on Sunday mornings going to see my uncle and my nan, Florrie Oliver. My dad Russell Oliver and I used to cycle over the old bridge which is now part of the Ete bypass. I was born in Eye in Northam Terrace just of the Crowland Road and lived there till I was 21. I now live in Stilton.

    
A memory of Eye contributed by SUE BOON

Extracts From Whittlesey & Cambridgeshire books

Whittlesey, Market Place 1904

The market place is the focal point of the town; the 17th-century Butter Cross offered shelter to the women selling dairy produce. The classical Tuscan columns support a pyramidal stone-slated roof. St Mary’s parish church has a 16th-century tower with pinnacles attached to the crocketed spire; it can be seen for miles around.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Villages Photographic Memories".

Whittlesey, Market Street c1965

This view down Market Street shows how Whittlesey has prospered in the past fifty years. The right-hand side of Market Street has been redeveloped, with the Queens Head replaced by the Market Street Cafe and a hairdresser's shop. Further along, shops have taken over the garage, but the cycle shop remains.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Living Memories".

Whittlesey, Market Place c1965

Here we see Cadets (left), the International Stores, and G E Norris, motor engineers. The most popular car of the time, the Mini, is parked in the foreground.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Villages Photographic Memories".

Whittlesey, Market Place c1965

Dating from 1680, the Butter Cross, now a listed building, provides the focal point for the busy Friday market, now with new metal railings and seating. Most of the shops around the square have changed in the past ten years, including the thatched greengrocer's shop to the left of the Butter Cross, now a cab company and insurance office.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Living Memories".

Whittlesey, the Memorial c1965

The war memorial opposite the Butter Cross is protected from traffic by railings. Behind the memorial is the Trustees Savings Bank and the county library. Bricks have been produced locally since the late 17th century, and the Oxford clays are still used for the mass production of bricks.
An extract from from"Cambridgeshire Villages Photographic Memories".