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The Square, Great Haywood

The west side of The Square. On the left is the Clifford Arms Hotel. The building was demolished in the 1930s and a new hotel was built on the site.

The Square, Great Haywood

View of the north side of The Square. On the left is the Clifford Arms Hotel. The building was demolished in the 1930s and a new hotel was built on the site.

The Square, Great Haywood

View of the south side of The Square. Note the signpost to Lichfield on the side of the Clifford Arms, and the two trees planted to celebrate Queen Victoria's Jubilee.

The Square, Great Haywood

View of The Square from Trent lane. The two trees were planted to celebrate Queen Victoria's Jubilee; a lorry drove into one in the 1920s, the other died a few years later.

The Square, Norton Canes

This postcard view can still be identified today especially as the corner shop on the right is still standing. Note the gas lamp in road. In the photograph are shoppers and children, and people passing ...

The Star Inn, Penkridge

The Star Inn stands on Market Place in Penkridge. The adjoining cottage with the tall gable to the right of this photograph has since been demolished.

The Stones, Newcastle Market

Watercolour of the High Street and the Guild Hall by Reginald G. Haggar with market stalls in the foreground.

The Stones, Newcastle-under-Lyme

This photograph shows the view of Newcastle-under-Lyme town centre from the bottom of the High Street. The large building in the centre of the photograph is The Guildhall which was built in 1713. Originally, ...

The Strand, Longton

The view along the Strand towards the railway bridge and Times Square, with the Crown Hotel building behind, taken from close to the corner of Heathcote Road. On the left hand edge is the entrance to ...

The Swan Hotel, Burslem

The Swan Hotel is on the north side of Swan Square in Burslem. Arnold Bennett called it the Duck inn in his novels of the Five Towns. Today it is a public house, called just The Swan. There was an inn ...

Three Indians, Market Hall, Audley

A troop of travelling Indians taken outside the Market Hall, Audley. The group included three genuine Indians, who are pictured here standing at the top of the steps. They were described in their advertisement ...

Tower Square, Tunstall

The clock tower, a grade II listed building, was built in commemoration of the Smith-Child family and paid for by public subscription. There are panels around the base of the tower detailing the Smith-Child ...

Town Hall and Market Hall, Rugeley

A postcard view taken in Anson Street, Rugeley, with the Town Hall and Market Hall on the left, the Police Station in the centre and on the right is a Hillman Minx car by a petrol pump arm outside Degg's ...

Town Hall, Rugeley

View of the Town Hall showing off its clock tower and weather vane. One of the shop awnings left of the tower advertises "White Spot Self Raising Flour, and on the right, in the background is Degg's Garage. ...

Town Hall, Rugeley,

The Town Hall and Market Hall were built in 1878-79 and the architect was W. Tadman Foulkes. The tower remains, the rest having being demolished in the 1980s.

Town Hall, Stoke-on-Trent: sepia drawing

'The Market House at Stoke, Staffordshire,' showing a Georgian building on four arches each side and two at the ends, with a low roof and a cupola. There are some stalls set up and waiting carts. Built ...

Tunstall Town Hall

The side entrance to Tunstall Town Hall on Butterfield Place (Formerly Amicable Street) and to the right, the entrance to the Public Market. Tunstall Town Hall was completed in 1885, built of brick and ...

Tunstall Town Hall

The side entrances to Tunstall Town Hall and Public Market in Butterfield Place. The market building dates from 1857 and the Town Hall from 1883 Both are grade II listed buildings. Tunstall High Street ...