Tatsfield
Tatsfield maps (2 available)
Tatsfield books (21 available)
Tatsfield memories
The Bakery, Tatsfield
Hi
My family ( The Watsons) owned the bakery which was a substantial building in the village centre. It housed the bakery itself ( My Uncle Dick Watson was the baker in those days) It was also a hotel with six bedrooms, plus it had a shop on the front corner, shown in the above photo.
I was 12 years of age at the time and used to visit my Grandad Watson in the long, triangulated room above the shop. He was well into his 80's in those days.
I am now 63 and live in nearby Westerham.
My Dad owned "Tatsfield Garage", 150 yards down Paynesfield Road from where the photo was taken in fact. My only brother Tony still ...read more here
Contributed by Barry Watson
Kent memories
The Bakery, Tatsfield
Hi
My family ( The Watsons) owned the bakery which was a substantial building in the village centre. It housed the bakery itself ( My Uncle Dick Watson was the baker in those days) It was also a hotel with six bedrooms, plus it had a shop on the front corner, shown in the above photo.
I was 12 years of age at the time and used to visit my Grandad Watson in the long, triangulated room above the shop. He was well into his 80's in those days.
I am now 63 and live in nearby Westerham.
My Dad owned "Tatsfield Garage", 150 yards down Paynesfield Road from where the photo was taken in fact. My only brother Tony still ...read more here
A memory of Tatsfield contributed by Barry Watson
A chauffeur working in Limpsfield
My Great-uncle, Bertie (or Robert) Jarrett, was born in Oxfordshire in 1887 and lived in Limpsfield from the 1920s until his death in 1975.
After serving in the Cavalry in the First World War, he became chauffeur to Sir Leslie Scott MP (Solicitor General in 1922), and later to Sir Benjamin Cohen KC. Bertie and his wife, Dorothy, had their own self-contained flat on the premises of one of these employers in (or near) Limpsfield.
Later, the couple moved to No. 2 White Hart Cottages, in Limpsfield High Street, where they lived until Bertie's death on their Diamond wedding anniversary in June 1975.
I am not sure whether the couple had any children. Does anybody remember ...read more here
The Lord Rodney Public House
This picture shoes in the fore ground the Lord Rodney Pub My Farther lived in a small building just out of the picture left side
A memory of Limpsfield contributed by Peter Wade
Extracts From Tatsfield & Kent books
The Corner Shop and
Station Parade Post Office
still provides an invaluable
service to residents and
passers-by, but an extension
has been built on to the end
wall for Saab who also trade
from the garage premises
shown here. George Jones
commenced running The
Corner Shop in 1966 with his
wife, Pat.
An extract from from"Coulsdon, Chipstead and Woodmansterne Photographic Memories".
Woodmansterne Station, situated in Coulsdon,
did not arrive until 1932 and, although some
distance from the old village, it was an impor-
tant factor in the development of new roads off
Rectory Lane as well as the profusion of roads in
west Coulsdon.
The photographic record importantly shows
the villages at different stages of their expansion
and repays careful study in understanding the
way they have evolved. This record can be useful-
ly supplemented by several other sources includ-
ing official records, local newspapers and per-
sonal reminiscences. Of the latter W G Gardner,
station-master at Coulsdon South from 1891,
recorded in 1916 the growth of the parish from
a hamlet to an urban district: `Red Lion Green
was a Green in every particular in those days.
Very few houses were in existence excepting the
old thatched cottages facing the Chipstead Valley
Road. …Cornfields were seen where the Fairdene
Estate now rises whilst High Street, Coulsdon
[Brighton Road] did not exist. Truly a revolution
in the short space of a
quarter of a century.`
In 1962 Mrs C Nicholls,
born in 1872, recalled
walking to St John`s
School, Bradmore Green
from Hooley: `We used
to walk up to the Star
[near Star Lane], turn left
over the railway bridge,
through lanes and across
Farthing Down, then
more lanes. We also had
this walk when I and my
sisters attended St John`s
Church for Sunday School.
Later I remember going to Sunday School in a
tin hut situated where the Comrades Club now
stands… We children used to wait by the side
of the main road for the London and Brighton
stage coaches, The Age, The Comet and Old
Times, to pass, when we called out "throw out
your mouldy coppers." One gentleman thought
he was tossing down a halfpenny but it turned
out to be a golden sovereign…Mother walked
to Croydon to shop pushing a perambulator
with wooden wheels and iron tyres and I often
went too…There were only about six shops in
what is now called Coulsdon but which was then
known as Smitham Bottom. They were all in old
cottages converted to shops. The nearest station
was Caterham Junction [Purley]. When I first
knew Chipstead Valley, the road was only a nar-
row lane, with rough flint surface and no lighting.
The only traffic was an occasional farm wagon or
flock of sheep…The fields where Richmond and
Alexander Roads are now always used to have
lots of poppies and looked very pretty`.
An extract from from"Coulsdon, Chipstead and Woodmansterne Photographic Memories".
A Victorian terrace
was demolished to
make way for the
commanding Tesco
store in the early
1960s, but after several
changes the building
presently houses the
Kabada restaurant, a
snooker hall and the
Thai Venue. On the
right, Mr Grover`s
business of garden
ornaments and
fencing has now been
replaced by lines of
second-hand cars on
the corner of Station Approach.
An extract from from"Coulsdon, Chipstead and Woodmansterne Photographic Memories".
The Red Lion public
house, the Water
Works and Coulsdon
Library on the east
side of Brighton Road
contrast in style and
date with the Victorian
terraced houses and
shops opposite. The
Water Works building
has been replaced by
Sentinel House and
the Red Lion survives
in 2004, boarded
up and awaiting demolition.
An extract from from"Coulsdon, Chipstead and Woodmansterne Photographic Memories".
In the mid 1950s car
owners could park
outside the shops and
cyclists could leave
their bicycles outside
the library.
An extract from from"Coulsdon, Chipstead and Woodmansterne Photographic Memories".





