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Mill Hill photos (12 available)

Old photo of Mill Hill

Mill Hill maps (1 available)

Old map of  Middlesex

Mill Hill books (18 available)

Mill Hill memories

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

Dumfriesshire memories

H.L Daniel's motorcycle shop & Buckley's bike shop

Forest Hill, Dartmouth Road c1965

I lived in Forest Hill in the 1960's on a road off Dartmouth Road. Two shops on the road stand out in my memory. Probably in 1965 both were still trading.
H.L. Daniel was a Norton works motorbike rider , probably in the 1930's and competed in the TT. Later he had a shop in Dartmouth road selling Nortons and there was always a big featherbed* twin and later the first Commando displayed in the window. He was an unlikely looking works motorcyclist, small, balding with pebble glasses and he wore a white coat while working in the shop.
I had a motorized push-bike with a Trojan Minimotor, 50cc which drove the rear wheel with a roller. I ...read more here
A memory of Forest Hill contributed by Graham Chivrall

Growing up in Purley

Purley, High Street c1965

When I lived in Purley, there weren't many stores.  I can remember when Sainsbury's opened across from Purley Fountain.  There was a toy shop in the High Street called Morgan's.  I stole a whistle from there when I was not very old.  I can remember it to this day.  It was yellow plastic with one of those pea things in that made the whistling noice.  I must have taken it home but I was soon on my way back to Morgan's to return the whistle and apologise for stealing it!

We lived in Dale Road and there was a row of shops along the Godstone Road.  A greengrocer's, Mr King's the grocers, Mr Nicholls newsagents, Mr Burrough's the tobacconist and ...read more here
A memory of Purley On Thames contributed by Liz Williams

Swimming at Reedham Orphanage

Purley, Reedham Orphanage 1903

I went to Whyteleafe Grammar school. At the time it was an all girls grammar school. We used to go on a coach to swim at Reedham Orphanage. I didn't know how to swim and I can remember to this day, telling Miss Edwards, the phys ed. teacher who was very strict, that I had read in a book that if you put your shoulders under the water, you would be able to swim and I asked if this was true! She said why didn't I try it and see! I can't remember if it worked. All I can remember is that it was an indoor pool but it had leaves and stuff in the ...read more here
A memory of Purley On Thames contributed by Liz Williams

Royal Family travelling through Reedham Train Station

I remember standing on the station platform to see the Royal Family pass through on the Royal Train. I have no recollection of where they were travelling to and I'm a bit hazy on the year.

We all wore our best clothes and stood waving. The train slowed down as it passed through the station. Then about 3 or 4 days later we did the same on the other side.

Myself and my two sisters, Janet and Eileen Hall were all at Reedham Orphanage. We were at Reedham from 1935 to about 1947/48.
A memory of Purley On Thames contributed by Chris Wallis

Extracts From Mill Hill & Dumfriesshire books

Mill Hill, the Broadway c1955

Arts and Crafts-style buildings, and the churches of St Michael and All Angels and the Sacred Heart and St Mary Immaculate set the pace and quality at this new Mill Hill, away from the old centre but close to the railway. A reminder of the area’s agrarian ancestry is to be found in Goodwyn Avenue, where the early 18th-century Lawrence Farmhouse stands, now indifferently converted to offices.
An extract from from"North London Photographic Memories".

Mill Hill, Stirling Corner and the Kings Arms Pub c1955

Well-designed bollards and street signs front a typical road-house at the junction of the Great North Road with the lesser east-west Elstree to Chipping Barnet Road. It is difficult not to feel a certain nostalgia for this grassy, almost rural roundabout.
An extract from from"North London Photographic Memories".

Mill Hill, the Golf Club, Barnet Way c1955

Look south away from Stirling Corner and past Mill Hill Golf Club bordering Thistle Wood and Scratch Wood (a rural name now adopted by the local motorway service station), and take a moment to reflect on a pre-dual carriageway Great North Road. There are tree-lined verges of considerable width, and two or three cars and cyclists little knowing the madness of dual carriageway traffic engineering that is just around the corner.
An extract from from"North London Photographic Memories".

Mill Hill, Watford Way c1965

Watford Way, running down to the North Circular Road from the M1 motorway, looks definitely under-used in 1960. It would have been pleasant enough to live alongside a relatively up-market road of wide verges and young trees, illuminated by attractive street lighting. Today traffic streams in all directions, and residents sit looking out from behind noise-reducing double-glazed windows.
An extract from from"North London Photographic Memories".

Mill Hill, the Broadway c1965

Here we see an attractive group of sub-Arts and Crafts buildings with steeply-pitched roofs and tile-hung dormer windows over an open timber balcony. The shop front of W H Smith & Son is well-designed, and Barclay’s Bank used a reticent, yet confident, typescript on their fascias. A precursor to the deterioration in town and village centre design is to be seen in the refenestration of the first floor to W H Smiths.
An extract from from"North London Photographic Memories".