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Hope-Under-Dinmore

Hope-Under-Dinmore photos (11 available)

Old photo of Hope-Under-Dinmore

Hope-Under-Dinmore maps (2 available)

Old map of Hope-Under-Dinmore

Hope-Under-Dinmore books (9 available)

Hope-Under-Dinmore memories

Gardener's boy

Hope-Under-Dinmore, Hampton Court c1955

My father went to work at Hampton Court as a gardener's boy when he left school at the age of 14 in 1917. By then, it was in use as a convalescent hospital for soldiers. I remember my father saying that he had to put little leather boots on the pony's hooves to mow the lawns with the horse-drawn mower, and that one of his jobs was to wash the leaves of indoor plants with milk. Many of my ancestors came from Hope under Dinmore and worked on the Hampton Court estate as woodmen, labourers, gamekeepers etc in the 19th and early 20th century. The children went to the village school which was provided by the Arkwrights free of charge ...read more here
Contributed by Liz Summerson

Herefordshire memories

Gardener's boy

Hope-Under-Dinmore, Hampton Court c1955

My father went to work at Hampton Court as a gardener's boy when he left school at the age of 14 in 1917. By then, it was in use as a convalescent hospital for soldiers. I remember my father saying that he had to put little leather boots on the pony's hooves to mow the lawns with the horse-drawn mower, and that one of his jobs was to wash the leaves of indoor plants with milk. Many of my ancestors came from Hope under Dinmore and worked on the Hampton Court estate as woodmen, labourers, gamekeepers etc in the 19th and early 20th century. The children went to the village school which was provided by the Arkwrights free of charge ...read more here
A memory of Hope-Under-Dinmore contributed by Liz Summerson

butchers shop

Leominster, Broad Street c1950

I have a picture of a double fronted butchers shop in the corn market. Over the door it says L.Pugh, outside is the butcher and his wife and probably their daughter Marie.  A family story was that a lad from the family when asked who he was replied "Jack Pugh, Leominster, kill sheep"  I assume there was an abbatoir behind the shop.
The picture is in an album of my parents around the 1920's. Any information please email me at bpmann@ntlworld.com
Thank you.


A memory of Leominster contributed by paul mann

Visiting the Corner House

I visited Weobley in the late 60s as a child with my Mother to visit our Herefordshire cousins. We stayed with Mum's Great Uncle Fred (Frederick Hope) and his daughter, Mabel Hope. They lived at the Corner House and I think Mabel's brother, Rogers Hope, lived near by in Broad Street. We came from London and I remember opening a cupboard door in the house to find a staircase. Mabel kept little hens in the back garden, which I think were gleeny fowl, which were the first live chickens I ever encountered. She sent us back to London with a basket of fresh eggs. My Grandmother, Mary Hope, was born at Bearwood Farm, near Pembridge ...read more here
A memory of Weobley contributed by Jane Dick

Extracts From Hope-Under-Dinmore & Herefordshire books

Hope-Under-Dinmore, Markhams Filling Station c1955

All three petrol pumps in the photograph are selling petrol for different companies. There is still a petrol station here today but it is linked to just one company. A cup of tea (see the sign beyond the pumps) can still be purchased here too – there is now a Little Chef on the site as well.
An extract from from"Herefordshire Living Memories".

Hope-Under-Dinmore, the Fork Road c1955

At this point the main Leominster to Hereford road starts to climb the steep hill. Stagecoaches would have been forced to stop here to pay their toll at the toll house overlooking the junction. Notice the AA phone box, a common sight around the countryside in the 1950s.
An extract from from"Herefordshire Living Memories".

Hope-Under-Dinmore, the Church c1955

One particularly sad monument in St Mary's Church is dedicated to a small child who died after choking on a cherry stone in 1708. The memorial even shows the child with the cherry in his mouth.
An extract from from"Herefordshire Living Memories".

Hope-Under-Dinmore, the Village c1955

The word ‘hope’ was an old Welsh word meaning a valley and so here we have the settlement in the valley under the hill fort, ‘mawr’ being a reference to the ancient hill fort at one end of the hill. Today this hill is a wonderful place to walk as it is largely taken over by the Queen’s Wood Country Park with an extensive collection of trees from all over the world.
An extract from from"Herefordshire Living Memories".

Hope-Under-Dinmore, Arkwright's Almshouses c1960

Nearby Hampton Court became the home of the Arkwright family, the well-known cotton spinning industrialists. The family were great benefactors to the village, hence the name of these almshouses. Notice the man working in his vegetable plot on the right of the picture.
An extract from from"Herefordshire Living Memories".