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

Worksop

Worksop photos (25 available)

Old photo of Worksop

Worksop maps (2 available)

Old map of Worksop

Worksop books (2 available)

Worksop memories

Worksop Baths

Saturday mornings we would trip off to Worksop on Booth @ Fisher bus from Kiveton Park with a suitcase. Call at Davis shop on Bridge St just through the lights at Newcastle Ave. Pack eight loaves of bread in the case trip off to Ryton St to a little shop where we could leave our case, then off to Worksop open air baths. It was a little chilly at times but great fun. After about two hours collect our case and off home. Those were the days.
Contributed by Dorothy Sankey

swimming

Worksop, the Swimming Pool c1955

I remember swimming in Worksop Lido almost everyday during the summer - or so it seemed.  We swam in the early morning before school, we swam '5 'til 6' after school (cost 4d) and sometimes on a Saturday morning for two hours for even less.  It must have been cold but we didn't notice.  The only time that we did notice was when we went from school on Monday mornings at about 9.30 - then it was very cold.  
Contributed by First name Last name

Priory Church

Worksop, Priory Church c1955

This view has hardly changed, I have recently took a photo from about the same place and it is almost the same. The wall running in front of the church as gone now but the park on the left and the school wall on the right is still intact. There are more road signs on the corner. I remember going round this corner on my bike when I was about ten and being stopped by a policeman and told off for not signalling. I remember shaking with fear because a policeman told me off. Oh how things have changed.
Contributed by barbara whiteman

Family

Worksop, Bridge Street 1967

The man walking behind the two ladies and carrying what looks like a picnic hamper is I think, my father - Dennis Davis.  Farther back in the picture are two women, one pushing a pushchair and a child running in front, this may be my grandmother, mother, baby sister and myself.  I would love to be able to zoom in on this picture.
Contributed by Jill Dowson

Matthews Opticians

Worksop, Bridge Street 1967

To the left of this photo, the first shop you can see was Reg Matthews opticians. You can just make out the entrance and the window above which is a V shape. As a trainee dispensing optician working there around 1971, I used to sit at this window and look down on Bridge St. Happy memories. The business was later taken over by G. Gilbert (who'd previously been a partner) and he's still there today to the best of my knowledge.
Deville's chemist was the shop next door - the one with the canopy blind.
Contributed by Sue Houghton

Shopping memories.

Worksop, Bridge Street 1967

This photograph shows two ladies chatting together in the foreground.  On the right in the floral dress is my mother Mrs Beatrice Farnsworth.  My family have been farmers in the locality for three generations.  My mother's car is parked on the road just behind her.  The shop to the side is Perham Cox, which was a family grocer,  which also delivered groceries to our house on a weekly basis.  The other lady is Mrs Jean Salmon who was also married to a local farmer. The way shopping was done in those days involved parking at the top of Bridge Street and moving the car down the hill as each shop was visited.  This is now a pedestrian area.  The only shiop I ...read more here
Contributed by Mrs H Levack

Extracts From Worksop & Nottinghamshire books

Worksop, Gateford Road c1955

Further north along Gateford Road, near the Gladstone Street turn, the spire of St John the Evangelist’s can be seen on the right behind the tall three-storey terrace of 1870s shops. To the right is the former Gateford Stores of 1905 in red brick and terra cotta, designed in a sort of Jacobean/Flemish style. It is now a carpet shop, having by the 1950s become a furniture store.
An extract from from"Nottinghamshire Living Memories".

Worksop, Canch Walk c1955

Along the north bank of the Canch is a footpath that leads east to Priorswell Road, with the Memorial Gardens on the right bank behind the trees that line it. The rather temporary- looking chain link fence has been replaced by proper railings. The very tall tree in the middle distance conceals the site of Priory Mill, an old watermill. By 1900 it had ceased milling corn and was a timber yard and chair maker’s workshop, but it burned down completely in 1912. Only a few walls survive to surround the Memorial Gardens maintenance yard.
An extract from from"Nottinghamshire Living Memories".

Worksop, Library and Memorial Gardens c1955

War Memorial Gardens were laid out to the north of Memorial Avenue between it and the Canch, as this stretch of the River Ryton is known. This view looks from the Canch banks towards the modernist library. It was built in the 1930s with a shallow central dome of glass blocks set in concrete, which lights the central space of the Central Library and Museum.
An extract from from"Nottinghamshire Living Memories".

Worksop, Victoria Square c1955

From Bridge Street we head north towards Victoria Square over the Chesterfield Canal, whose bridge parapets are in the foreground. Out of view to the right and spanning the canal is the former Pickford’s Depository, a warehouse built in the early 19th century in yellow brick (the rest of the town is in red brick). It has trap doors for direct loading into the narrow barges, or ‘cuckoos’ as they were known, and a crane on the canal bank. It is now part of the Lock Tavern, which fronts the road.
An extract from from"Nottinghamshire Living Memories".

Worksop, Welbeck Abbey c1955

This vast and architecturally complex mansion is on the site of an abbey founded in 1153, of which fragments remain. After the Dissolution it eventually passed in 1597 to William Cavendish, grandson of the famous Bess of Hardwick, and then by marriage to the Dukes of Portland in 1734. Having for some years partly been occupied by an army college, it is now a private house, the home of William Parente, Prince of Castel Viscardo, a grandson of the 7th Duke of Portland.
An extract from from"Nottinghamshire Living Memories".