Tixall House, Tixall
This postcard view of Tixall House was sent with “every Good Wish for Christmas from all at Tixall”. Tixall House is an early 19th century Grade II listed building. It was franked in Stafford on 24 December ...
Trentham Gardens,
The original Trentham Hall was built in the 1630s for the Dukes of Sutherland. The Caroline house was replaced in the early eighteenth century by one in a Classical style. Capability Brown and Henry ...
Trentham Hall,
The original Trentham Hall was built in the 1630s for the Dukes of Sutherland. The Caroline house was replaced in the early eighteenth century by one in a Classical style. Capability Brown and Henry ...
Trysull Holloway
This postcard view of cottages on the Trysull Holloway is looking north from near the junction of Seisdon Road. The village still retains many of the old cottages and houses.
Various mediaeval routes ...
Two women, Woodseaves area
Two young women and a pet dog in front of an ivy-covered house in the Woodseaves area.
Photographer: Harry Osbourne of Woodseaves.
Two women, Woodseaves area
Two women with a dog and a cat, seated outside an unidentified house in the Woodseaves area.
Photographer: Harry Osbourne of Woodseaves.
Vera Doughty, The Croft, Seighford
Vera Doughty (nee Breeze and married to Jim Doughty) is pictured outside a building known as the Croft (sometimes known as the Craft) which in later years was demolished and replaced with housing on ...
Victoria Road, Stafford
This row of houses on Victoria Road, Stafford, were later demolished and replaced by an office building known as Kemley House. On the extreme left is a part view of the wall of the Station Hotel which ...
Walkley Bank, Forton
A postcard view taken on Walkley Bank, looking towards the A519 and crossroads with Shay Lane in the centre of Forton village. All of the buildings in this view remain (May 2023) and in later years the ...
Walton-on-the-Hill house
Originally known as No.1 The Village, the house was built in the mid-19th century. Helen, Lady Salt moved here in 1904 after the death of her husband, Sir Thomas Salt MP. She renamed it 'Walton-on-the-Hill'. ...
Walton-on-the-Hill house
Originally known as No.1 The Village, the house was built in the mid-19th century. Helen, Lady Salt moved here in 1904 after the death of her husband, Sir Thomas Salt MP. She renamed it 'Walton-on-the-Hill'. ...
Walton-on-the-Hill house drive and garden, Walton-on-the-Hill
Originally known as No.1 The Village, the house was built in the mid-19th century. Helen, Lady Salt moved here in 1904 after the death of her husband, Sir Thomas Salt MP. She renamed it 'Walton-on-the-Hill'. ...
Walton-on-the-Hill house garden, Walton-on-the-Hill
A view of the garden in front of the house.
Originally known as No.1 The Village, the house was built in the mid-19th century. Helen, Lady Salt moved here in 1904 after the death of her husband, Sir ...
Weston Hall,
This seventeenth century hall is located half a mile west of Weston, on the lower slopes of Weston Bank.
In the early twentieth century the house was sold to pay gambling debts and is now a restaurant....
Weston Post Office
On the reverse of this postcard it says that the Post Mistress and her daughter are pictured standing outside Weston Post Office.
The two notices over the door state: "James W. Muir, Grocer and Provision ...
Willow Cottage Farmhouse, Aston-by-Stone
A postcard view of Willow Cottage Farmhouse, a 17th century timber-framed thatched house in Aston-by-Stone.
Winifred and William Dutton and Emily Green, Walton on the Hill
Photograph of Winifred and William Dutton in 1918 with their friend Emily Green (in white top). St.Thomas' Church, Walton-on-the-Hill is in the background.
Winifred Dutton with her mother Louisa Bayliss, Walton on the Hill
Winifred Dutton in 1919 with her mother Louisa Bayliss and her brother William Bayliss, recently returned from the First World War(Gallipoli and the Somme). St. Thomas' Church spire can be seen in the ...