Aldeburgh
Aldeburgh maps (2 available)
Aldeburgh books (15 available)
Ispwich Pocket Album
Paperback
- 36 photos on Aldeburgh appear in 8 Frith books - View photos of Aldeburgh
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Aldeburgh and Suffolk
Aldeburgh memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in Suffolk below.
Suffolk memories
Garrett's of Leiston
Aerial photo AFA77116TR: "Leiston from the Air 1959" Is a view taken looking toward the East and clearly showing the Garrett's "Bottom Works", which formed a large part of the town centre at that time. This very old facility, part of which is now preserved as a Museum, housed some of the main manufacturing facilities for the "Richard Garrett Engineering Works". Garrett's were the towns main employers and were involved in doing work for a variety of other companies. Shaping machines for Elliot's of London, Corrugated cardboard box machinery for S&S of New York, Portable Compressors for Broomwade, Radio chassis for Pye's of Cambridge, Peat bog harvesters for Bord na Mona of Ireland, were some of the many products being engineered ...read more here
A memory of Leiston contributed by Derek Stanbridge
Samuel Wright
I am researching my husbands family tree. His great grandad was Samuel Wright who was a coal hauler in Grimsby in 1883, on looking at the census further I found he came from Sudbourne in Suffolk. Terry [my husband] had no idea that his Wright family had originated from there. Does anyone know of any of Sam Wrights family still around there or have any knowledge of the Wrights. Is Sudbourne a small place? What is it like now? We intend to visit one day. Many thanks Chris Wright
A memory of Sudbourne contributed by chris wright
International Stores
A previous shared memory recalling International Stores reminds me that my father worked there, as a roundsman. He would cycle every day from Leiston, then do the equivalent all over again in Saxmundham, several times a day as he delivered groceries.
He had his own band - he played piano - and met my mother, Joan Spatchet, at a dance in the Market Hall. They married in 1937, my sister Ann was born a year later and I arrived on February 23rd 1944 - just a few weeks after my father was killed on a bombing raid over Germany on January 1/2nd, when his plane was attacked by a night fighter. Two years ago we travelled to Germany from our ...read more here
A memory of Saxmundham contributed by John Fisher
blacksmiths
Apparently my Gr Grandfather John Freeman owned a blacksmith shop that was situated just on the left hand side of the road here at the beginning of the 20th century. He also made the 'fences' that protected the bases of many of the trees on the Hurts Hall estate. I've never been able to find any written infromation about him or the 'smithy' though.
A memory of Saxmundham contributed by carol allen
Extracts From Aldeburgh & Suffolk books
This view looks south from one of the two lookout towers on the beach. The yawls parked on the beach were organised into two companies, the ‘Up-towners’ and ‘Down-towners’, with their respective headquarters at the lookout towers. Intermingled with the boats are bathing machines, evidence of Aldeburgh’s growing tourist industry.
An extract from from"Suffolk Photographic Memories".
Such open spaces as you see on the right provided room to dry and certainly to repair nets.
The beach is covered with the detritus of the fishing trade - barrels, boxes and buckets, neatly
juxtaposed with bathing machines for the hardy swimmers.
An extract from from"Southwold to Aldeburgh Photographic Memories".
Little more than
a shingle beach
protects the Moot
Hall. Once it was
centrally placed
in the town, but
the sea has carried
away a number
of streets, finally
pausing here.
An extract from from"Southwold to Aldeburgh Photographic Memories".
The timber-framed Tudor Moot Hall is situated next to the beach. When it was built, the meeting house was actually right in the centre of town, but coastal erosion over hundreds of years has swept away much of the old town, and left the beach almost next door to the building.
An extract from from"Suffolk Photographic Memories".
Built in 1540, during
the post-moot age
really, this red brick
and half-timbered
Moot Hall would
have been a hotbed
of commercial and
legal activities during
the town’s most
prosperous era. It
has also served as a
police station and a
jail. It is the symbol of
Aldeburgh.
An extract from from"Southwold to Aldeburgh Photographic Memories".







