Church of the Resurrection, Dresden, Longton
The Church of the Resurrection was built on land given by the Duke of Sutherland in 1853, to designs by George Gilbert Scott. It stands on red Bank in Dresden, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent. It was extended ...
Church of the Resurrection, Dresden. Photographed by William Blake.
Church exterior with a view of the Church of the Resurrection at Red Bank, Dresden, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire.
This is one of many street scenes in the Blake Collection. Most of them were taken ...
Church Street, Eccleshall,
View looking from Church Street down High Street.
The house in the centre (with a hedge) is Ivy Mount.
Classroom, Yarlet Hall
A postcard view of one of the classrooms at Yarlet Hall.
Yarlet Hall replaced an earlier 18th century building; work on a new house was begun around 1870 by George Sidney. In 1873 The Reverend Walter ...
Claymills Pumping Station, Burton-upon-Trent
Claymills Pumping Station was designed by James Mansergh and opened in 1885. It was used to pump sewage from Burton-upon-Trent to a sewage farm at Etwall, and was built in response to increasing health ...
Clemesha Brothers & Birch, New Street Mill, Leek
Clemesha Brothers & Birch moved into New Street Mill in 1907. The building is now (2014) occupied by Blakemore & Chell, heating engineers, founded in Leek in 1903. A large part of the works were burned ...
Coach and Horses Hotel, Pasturefields, Hixon,
The Coach and Horses public house had a 42 bedroom motel added to it which subsequently closed in 1991. It was then converted into the 65 bed Anson House Nursing Home.
The pub was converted into ...
Cock Inn, Stowe-by-Chartley,
The Cock Inn brewed its own beer.
Cock Inn, Woodseaves,
Thomas Henry Lees was a farmer and the landlord of the Cock Inn. He brewed and sold beer.
Colwich Railway Station,
Colwich Railway Station was designed by Livock in 1847. It was jointly run by North Staffordshire Railways (The Knotty) and London and North Western Railways.
Colwich was the most southerly station ...
Coming of Age of Viscount Anson, Shugborough Hall,
A group photograph taken on the occasion of Viscount Thomas Edward Anson's Coming of Age. He later became the 4th Earl. Although his 21st birthday was on 9 December 1904, Viscount Anson was travelling ...
Commemorative window, St. Luke’s Church, Cannock
This commemorative window, 'the Last Communion on the Battlefield', was given by Charles Loxton in memory of his son Charles Edward Holden Loxton, known as Edward. He was a 2nd Lieutenant in the North ...
Congregational Church, Martin Street, Stafford
The entrance to the Congregational Church also known as Zion Chapel on Martin Street.
This building's origins are thought to date from 1811 according to a 1964 local-newspaper article. It stated that ...
Congreve House, Walton-on-the Hill, Stafford
Congreve House, Walton-on-the Hill, Stafford.
This Grade II Listed 17th century timber framed building was clad in brick around the 18th century. It is the birthplace of Lieutenant-General Sir William ...
Conservatory, Alton Towers
A postcard view of the House Conservatory which linked the Drawing Room with the Octagon.
Alton Towers was the home of the Talbot family, Earls of Shrewsbury. It was built between about 1810 and 1852. ...
Conservatory, Alton Towers
This postcard view was published by The Alton Towers Café, Alton, Staffs.
Alton Towers was the home of the Talbot family, Earls of Shrewsbury. It was built between about 1810 and 1852.
The 15th ...
Convalescing soldiers at Ravenhill House, Brereton
The house had been briefly unoccupied when, in March 1915, the War Office intimated that Lady Zouche had offered the house as a V.A.D (Voluntary Aid Detached) Hospital to be operated by the Red Cross ...
Convent of the Holy Rosary, Cannock
Opened in 1898 by the Sisters of the Christian Retreat, the Convent later became Lyncroft School in the 1970s and then Chase Academy in 1998, since renamed Chase Grammar School.. The Convent building ...