Banstead
Banstead maps (2 available)
Banstead books (21 available)
- 6 photos on Banstead appear in 3 Frith books - View photos of Banstead
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Banstead and Surrey
Banstead memories
Banstead War Memorial in its original position
This card shows the Banstead War Memorial before it was moved to its current positition in the 1990s.
Sutton Lane was very narrow in earlier times and conductors used to have to get off the bus to check that there was not another one coming the other way. Often the buses had a hard time coming up the hill from Sutton and an old watering can was kept by the Woolpack to enable the driver to top up the radiator.
If you would like to know more about the history of Banstead, check out the Banstead History Research Group website. You will also find an ongoing project to research the history of the memorial and the stories ...read more here
Contributed by Lewis Wood
Opposite the school
Does anyone else remember the chain railings and posts, painted black and white around the green in front of these shops? I used to jump over them as a small child. They enclosed all the grass area.
Contributed by heather Lee
Bassett House
The large oblong building on the left was Bassett House of which the ground floor was Waitrose. The Bassett Family lived at Hunters Lodge, Banstead and the three children grew up to represent England. Sheena in running and swimming marathons and Pippa and Karen won bronze medals for the British team in the horse four in hand World Driving trials They are both short listed for this years team [2006] and Karen is the leading lady driver in GB and the World.
Contributed by heather Lee
Banstead Residential School, Fir Tree Road
I was at the school from 1929/1939. My name is Stanley Thomas, I would like to be in touch with anyone who was there at the same time. When the Second World War broke out we were evacuated to Reigate, Surrey. I remember Reginald Boulton, David Seeley, William Lee, Cyril Seeley. If any of you are still about, please get in touch. The head master was C L G Raynor, the house mother was a Mrs Bell of C Cottage. I now live in West Sussex. My e-mail address is classicnats@talktalk.net Phone 01903877106.
Contributed by First name Last name
banstead station
I well remember Banstead station in the 1950's. I used it to go to school in Wallington from 1953 to 1959 and then to go to College and then to work in London. At this time I lived in Nork and of course in those days the trains were all steam trains. My father used to go to work by train in the 1940's and always said that at 8.00am , standing on the platform waiting for the London Bridge train, you could hear a nightingale sing. Sadly as the station became busier, this ceased, but it was always one of his abiding memories of Banstead Sation.
Contributed by helen perry
Catching a train
After visiting my aunt and uncle who were the Matron and Superintendant of the Banstead Residential School, which was adjacent to the railway line, my mother and I would hasten along to the station to begin our journey home. If a train was drawing into the station on the way towards London mother would call down to the station staff on the platform, which was well below the footpath, and the train would be held until puffing and out of breath we could continue to the station and run down the stairs. What a service. Today the staff would strain to keep to the timetable!
The schools have long since been demolished and a housing estate has taken their ...read more here
Contributed by Daphne Poynter
Moving of the war memorial
Note in this photo that the war memorial has been moved back and the wall lowered. Flats have been built on the Banstead house site. You could always see the green houses over the high wall from the top of the 164a bus. The corner shop, which I think used to be a bakery (top left) has gone and the road widened. The bus always used to mount the curb on this corner when turning towards the downs and Greenacre school roundabout.
Contributed by heather Lee
Extracts From Banstead & Surrey books
The parade of
shops on the left are
currently occupied by
Thomas Cook, Abbey,
a hairstylist and a
photographic shop,
whilst Boots is in the
adjacent block. On
the opposite side of
the road a parade of
shops has replaced
the undertaker`s and
surrounding houses.
The village school
beyond has given way
to Waitrose.
An extract from from"Coulsdon, Chipstead and Woodmansterne Photographic Memories".
Much of Banstead High Street was rebuilt during the 1920s with a series of shopping parades. The leafless lime tree in the middle distance occupies the spot where the village pond once existed, while All Saints’ churchyard is concealed behind the trees on the extreme right.
An extract from from"Around Cheam, including Sutton, Ewell, Banstead and Epsom Photographic Memories".
Fifty years ago the
high street had
assumed its present
busy appearance, and
it is seen here from
opposite All Saints`
Church. Collinson`s
shop on the left is now
Oscar`s hairdresser`s,
with a Scope charity
shop next door.
An extract from from"Coulsdon, Chipstead and Woodmansterne Photographic Memories".
The station, on the branch line from Sutton to Epsom Downs, opened in 1865, and the white stuccoed house, now a builder’s offices, dates from around the same time. The small confectionery kiosk was one of a trio servicing the requirements of commuters, with other branches at Sutton and Epsom. The roof of the station no longer bears the white lettering, and the building is almost a mile from the town centre itself. The road almost immediately makes another sharp bend over the railway line below, before passing the Cuddington Golf Clubhouse and continuing on to East Ewell.
An extract from from"Around Cheam, including Sutton, Ewell, Banstead and Epsom Photographic Memories".
Banstead station, on the branch line from Sutton to Epsom Downs station,
opened in 1865. The stucco house on the left, most recently Banstead Builders
Merchants, dates from around that time, while the station building retains some of
the 1865 work. The kiosk is now a builder’s office, and the station building is let
as offices. Chimneyless now, the roof is no longer painted with giant letters. The
station is nearly a mile from the town centre of Banstead.
An extract from from"Surrey Living Memories".





