Kingsley village
A veiw looking along Hazles Cross Road at the junction with The Green, Kingsley.
Kingsley Village
The school can be seen in the distance to the left. On the right is a delivery cart from Buntings Brewery of Uttoxeter.
Kingstone
Kingstone lies about three miles south-west of Uttoxeter, close to the River Blythe and within the boundaraies of the Forest of Needwood. The name ‘Kingstone’ originates from the Old English, ‘cyninges’ ...
Kinver
The village of Kinver is situated in the south-west corner of Staffordshire and is dominated by Kinver Edge, renowned for its rock houses. Its attractive scenery earned it the description of ‘the Switzerland ...
Kinver Church
St. Peter's Church mostly dates from the 14th and 15th centuries. The Victorian north aisle was rebuilt in the 1980s.
Kinver Edge - 'Megs Foxhole': sepia drawing
'Megs Foxhole Kinfare Edge.' Showing a view of the rock dwelling in Kinver Edge. Artist: 'T. P. W.,' [Thomas Peploe Wood.]
Kinver Hill, Kinver
The bottom of Kinver Hill at the junction with High Street and Mill Lane.
Knighton
Knighton is situated to the south - west of Eccleshall. It is in the parish of Adbaston. The name may mean ‘the boy’s (or servant’s) town. In the Domesday Book of 1086 Knighton appears as ‘Chnitestone’ ...
Knutton
Knutton is now a built - up suburb of Newcastle under Lyme and it is perhaps hard to appreciate that there has been a settlement here since the time of the Domesday Survey of 1086 when it appears as ‘Clotone’. ...
Landscape. Unknown Location. Photographed by William Blake.
Lantern slide with a landscape including a lake and church.
Unknown location.
Lansdowne Avenue, Codsall
Lansdowne Avenue before the houses were built. This post card was found in a chimney in Nancy Johnson’s old house in Lansdowne Avenue.
Lapley
Lapley is a parish of two communities and former townships, Lapley and Wheaton Aston, situated to the west of Penkridge.
The name, Lapley, probably comes from the Saxon ‘Laeppa Leah’, meaning a woodland ...
Lapley Hall
Lapley Hall dates from the late 16th or early 17th century and is brick-built with stone dressings. the house was enlarged and extensively restored by Col. F.H. Swinfen in 1875. During the Civil War ...
Leek Road, Cheddleton
Looking south along Leek Road towards Cheddleton. The track leading off to the left is what is now Basford View. On the skyline to the right can be seen the tower of St. Edward's Church.
Postcard ...
Leigh Cottage. Photographed by William Blake.
A view of a Tudor styled house called Leigh Cottage, Leigh, Staffordshire.
Leigh Post Office, Church Leigh
Photograph of the Post Office, Church Leigh, Staffordshire. It is now (2015) a private residence. Taken by Uttoxeter photographer Alfred McCann.
Leigh Post Office. Photographed by William Blake.
Village scene taken at Leigh, Staffordshire.
The photograph includes the village Post Office and a group of women, one using a cast iron water pump.