The Francis Frith Collection.
You are here: Home > Explore your past > England > London > Brixton
Save 50-70% on Prestige coffee-table books!

Brixton

Brixton photos (16 available)

Old photo of Brixton

Brixton maps (2 available)

Old map of Brixton

Brixton books (18 available)

Brixton memories

Be the first to add a memory of Brixton.

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

London memories

Manor Farm Dairy - 12 Herne Hill Road SE24

My uncle George Bowen and his wife Rene ran the Manor Farm Dairy out of 12 Herne Hill Road.  According to my mother who would visit them during the holidays - milk was delivered in those days in big churns pushed on a barrow.

The housewives would bring out their jugs and milk was ladled into the jug.  There was only one kind of milk no choice with regard to skimmed or semi-skimmed.  Butter came in big blocks and was put on marble slabs and weighed, it would be shaped and cut up on the marble slabs and shaped into rounds and stamped with a pattern of a cow.

There was a shop attached to the front of ...read more here
A memory of Herne Hill contributed by Geraldine Todd

Playground Apparatuses

Clapham, Childrens Playground, the Common c1965

How wonderful to have my memory jogged by the lovely pictures of Clapham Common. After school, most days we (my brother Lance) and my mother would have such fun. We would play spot the park keeper, (always nicely turned out in their brown suits) now sorely missed ! But the playground picture with the 'umberella' in the background(did anybody else call it that ) where you would sit on the ringed seat and hope a bigger child would push you around , backwards and forwards. Didn't you have to hold on for merry hell ! does anybody remember the 'banana boat'? like a enormous sideways swing. If you were really brave you'd sit on the end.Just as it was getting too ...read more here
A memory of Clapham contributed by Margaret Beil

Christmas

Clapham, High Street c1965

I remember Clapham High Street well.  My mum worked in Lyons Tea Shop that stood next to the bank.  It turned into the butcher shop.  I remember meeting my mum, she would have all left over cakes.  We thought it was great - all the sticky buns and gingerbread men.  It was memories of my childhood.
A memory of Clapham contributed by linda richardson

Cross country

Dulwich, Tollgate 1898

I attended Kingsdale school and lived on kingswood estate, I remember doing the cross country at school through the toll gate and my dad used to be a taxi driver and there used to be a man standing there as you had to pay to go through.also remember cutting through St stephens church just up from the photo and going into low cross woods with the dogs. Great memories. 1970 to 1986
A memory of Dulwich contributed by Jenna Goddard

Extracts From Brixton & London books

Brixton, St John's Church c1965

St John’s Church, by Benjamin Ferrey, was completed in 1853 as the centrepiece of Angell Town. It has a fine Perpendicular-style tower with chequer-work battlements and elegant corner pinnacles. The 1850s houses between it and the photographer were demolished in the 1970s and replaced by a large council housing estate, Peckford Place. The lime trees in front of the church survive, and have matured well.
An extract from from"London Living Memories".

Brixton, Angell Town from the South c1965

Angell Town was an estate of 1850s Italianate villas, mostly semi-detached, built on curving roads centred on St John’s church, whose 1853 tower is crowned by four pinnacles. This view is from an upper balcony of Eldon House, one of the eleven-storey blocks of council flats built c1960 on the Loughborough Estate. Nearly all the villas have since been demolished and replaced by four-storey council flats in yellow stock brick. In the distance we can see the Houses of Parliament, the Victoria Tower and Big Ben.
An extract from from"London Living Memories".

East Ham, High Street c1965

High Street North is a relatively undistinguished and typical London suburban shopping street: the exuberance of the Town Hall complex is forgotten. The Midland Bank on the corner of Caulfield Road (right) is one of their 1920s Classical-style single-storey buildings that add quality to many High Streets. On the left the taller Victorian brick buildings were demolished in the 1970s and replaced by bland flat roofed ones.
An extract from from"London Living Memories".

East Ham, North Circular Road c1965

We pass under the River Thames via the Blackwall Tunnel - the northbound side dates from the 1890s, an early project of the LCC, which was established in 1888. East Ham was in Essex until 1965, but since the mid 19th century very much a part of greater London. Here we approach East Ham’s town centre along the busy North Circular Road, which seems in places merely a casual linkage of suburban roads. These terraces of neat Edwardian bay-windowed houses survive, and lead towards the Town Hall with its tower.
An extract from from"London Living Memories".

Greenwich, the Royal Naval College and Riverside Walk 1951

Our tour now heads north-east to Greenwich to a much grander building. The Royal Naval Hospital, a counterpart to the Chelsea Hospital for soldiers, began as a rebuild of Greenwich Palace by Charles II in the 1660s, but it changed direction in the 1690s. The second pediment from the right is Webb’s 1660s work. In 1873 it became the Royal Naval College; when that closed, in the 1990s it became part of Greenwich University. In the distance are the chimneys of Greenwich Power Station of 1902-10.
An extract from from"London Living Memories".