Motorcyclist, Chartley Castle
Edna Gains sitting on a Triumph motor cycle by the side of the Stafford to Uttoxeter road (A518), with Chartley Castle in the background.
Munitions workers at Eccleshall Castle
Munitions workers from Frobisher Hall on a day trip to Eccleshall Castle.
Frobisher Hall was a hostel for workers at the Royal Ordnance Factory at Swynnerton during and just after the 2nd World War. ...
New flag pole at Etching Hill, Rugeley
A new flag pole being carried to the top of the hill at Etching Hill, near Rugeley by members of Etching Hill Athletic Football Club.
At the front (top of the hill) is Terry Harvey; behind him is Dennis ...
Newport Road and Castle, Stafford
On the right can be seen Stafford Castle, built in the early nineteenth century on the site of a medieval castle by the Jerningham family. The construction work was poor and part of the north tower fell ...
Norman and Saxon Carvings, Colwich Church,
Various pieces of stonework set into the wall of the vestry of St. Michael and All Angels Church.
The head, piscina, and column are believed to be Saxon. The chevron mouldings at the lower end are ...
Norman Coffin Lids, Colwich Church,
Coffin slabs set into the wall of the vestry of St. Michael and All Angels Church.
The 'wheel-head' pattern dates from 1200 - 1250, and the scissors and buckle could refer to the livelihood of the ...
Norman Font, St. Mary and All Saints' Church, Bradley
The church at Bradley dates from the Norman period, but was rebuilt in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. The font is also Norman, with Greek key decoration.
Photograph donated by Stafford Historical ...
North Tower, Tutbury Castle
The North Tower was built in the 1450s, and although ruined, still stands to its full four storey height.
Tutbury Castle is first mentioned in 1071, when it was transferred to Henry de Ferrers from ...
North Tower, Tutbury Castle
A tinted lantern slide view of the North Tower at Tutbury Castle.
The North Tower was built in the 1450s, and although ruined, still stands to its full four storey height.
Tutbury Castle is first ...
North Tower, Tutbury Castle
The North Tower was built in the 1450s, and although ruined, still stands to its full four storey height.
Tutbury Castle is first mentioned in 1071, when it was transferred to Henry de Ferrers from ...
Old Pound, Blount's Green, Uttoxeter
View of the Old Pound at Bount's Green, Uttoxeter at the junction between the A518 Stafford Road and the B5013 road to Rugeley. Probably late 18th century, it consists of a series of vertical oblong stones ...
Old Quern, Pillaton Hall, Penkridge. Photographed by William Blake.
An old quern at Pillaton Hall, Penkridge, Staffordshire.
Querns were hand milling tools used to grind corn.
Old Stafford Society visit to the Devil's Ring and Finger, Mucklestone
The Old Stafford Society was a local history group, founded in 1925. They organised many visits to places of historical interest.
Members of the Society are gathered by these two ancient standing stones, ...
Old Stafford Society visit to the Devil's Ring and Finger, Mucklestone
The Old Stafford Society was a local history group, founded in 1925. They organised many visits to places of historical interest.
A Society member poses for the photographer at these two ancient standing ...
Old Stafford Society visit to the Devil's Ring and Finger, Mucklestone
The Old Stafford Society was a local history group, founded in 1925. They organised many visits to places of historical interest.
Philip Dale poses for the photographer by these two ancient standing ...
Old Stafford Society visit to Tittensor,
Old Stafford Society was a local history group, founded in 1925. They organised many visits to places of historical interest.
This photograph was taken on the society's outing to the ruins of a fifteenth ...
Old stocks, Cheddelton
Stocks built into churchyard wall opposite the Black Lion, Cheddleton. They are believed to be old stone stocks and are set into the churchyard perimeter wall, opposite the Black Lion Inn. Since this ...
Old Stone Cross, Chebsey Churchyard,
Anglo-Saxon cross shaft re-erected in the south east corner of the churchyard of All Saints.
The shaft dates from the mid-eleventh century.
Photograph donated by Stafford Historical and Civic Society, ...