Date:1906
Description:Henry III granted the first annual fair to Stafford in 1261. Fairs had two sides - trade and pleasure. People would travel from a wide area to visit the fairs, which often filled the town's main streets. By 1900 a pleasure fair, known as the Gorby Fair, was held in the Market Square at the same time as the cattle fairs. The cattle fair on Gaolgate Street, known as the Rother Market, continued until 1909 when it moved to Lammascote Road. On the left is the Jubilee Fountain, erected in 1887 to mark Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee. It was demolished in 1934.
The timeline shows resources around this location over a number of years.
There has been a shire building in Stafford since the 1280s, used as a meeting place ...
Design for a new Shire Hall on Market Square. In 1790 a decision was made to ...
Stafford possessed a market as early as 1206, when Edward the Elder passed a law ...
The Elizabethan House was built on Gaolgate Street in the late Tudor period. The ...
William Booth (1829 - 1912), known as 'General Booth', founded the Christian Mission ...
Mayor William Thomas Richardson and Mayoress Emily Richardson of Stafford christening ...
One of the first banks to open outside London was Stevenson, Salt and Co. in 1737. ...
View looking north-west from over South Walls and Eastgate Street. The River ...
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Image courtesy of: William Salt Library
Donor ref:William Salt Library No., Stafford 24J, img: 622 (18/1148)
Source: Staffordshire Museum Service
Copyright information: Copyrights to all resources are retained by the individual rights holders. They have kindly made their collections available for non-commercial private study & educational use. Re-distribution of resources in any form is only permitted subject to strict adherence to the usage guidelines.