Whitmore Hall
This Grade I listed building has been the home of the Mainwaring family (now Cavenagh-Mainwaring) and their direct ancestors for over 900 years.
The earlier timber-framed house was modified and encased ...
Whitmore Road Lodge, Trentham
Whitmore Road Lodge or Hargreaves Lodge, and built by Thomas Roberts, the Sutherland Estate's Surveyor and Architect in 1896. The Sutherlands used this lodge if they were travelling to Newcastle or Market ...
Windmill Inn, Werrington
This postcard view shows the Windmill Inn close to Werrington windmill which is thought to have been built around 1730. The landlord at the time of this photograph was Frederick Dale.
The inn began ...
Windy Arbour, Cheddleton
Windy Arbour, Cheadle Road, Cheddleton, was the home of John Milner and Mary Ann Milner (nee Clowes) and their family. Two of their children Thomas (born 1862) and Miriam (born 1865) are seated on the ...
Windygates Hall, near the Roaches
The Hall was erected in 1634 by Thomas Brough and Elizabeth Cotton. Windygates has been occupied and farmed by the Robinson for most of the past 150 years.
Wolgarston Farm House, near Penkridge
Situated off Cannock Road near the M6, this Grade II Listed building dates from 1798.
Wolseley Hall, Colwich,
The Wolseley family had lived on the estate since Norman times. In the eighteenth century Wolseley Hall was rebuilt, but burned down in the 1950s.
The estate remained derelict until 1990, when the ...
Wolseley Hall, Rugeley
The Wolseley family had lived on the estate since Norman times. In the eighteenth century Wolseley Hall was rebuilt, but suffered from a serious fire in the early 1950s. In 1954 the Hall was in a great ...
Wolseley Hall, Rugeley
The photograph shows the central entrance porch on the south front of Wolseley Hall. This was added by the 7th Baronet during his and James Trubshaw's remodelling of the Hall in around 1821. The room ...
Wolverhampton High-Level Railway Station
The main entrance to Wolverhampton High-Level Railway Station.
The Station is thought to have been built by local architect Edward Banks for the Shrewsbury & Birmingham Railway (S&B). It was opened ...
Wolverhampton Road, Stafford
Numbers 60 to 73 Wolverhampton Road, Stafford. The photograph was taken by the junction with Telegraph Street which is on the left, this view is little changed today (2025).
Wolverhampton Road, Stafford
This view shows the Wolverhampton Road at the junction with White Lion Street on the right.
On the left at No. 5, Wolverhampton Road is Anne Giles: "Stafford's Leading Ladies Hairdresser" who also ...
Wolverhampton Town Hall
Wolverhampton Town Hall photographed in 1966 by Dr J.E.C. Peters.
Situated on North Street, Wolverhampton, this Grade II listed building dates from 1869-71. It was designed by Manchester architect ...
Woodings Yard, Bailey Street, Stafford
A view of Woodings Yard taken by the entrance in Bailey Street, Stafford.
In later years one of the buildings on the right of the entrance was converted into a restaurant known as The Pâté ...
Wootton Lodge, near Ellastone
Wootton Lodge was built as a hunting lodge by Sir Richard Fleetwood between about 1580 and 1610. It was badly damaged during the Civil War and much of the interior was restored in about 1700. Sir Oswald ...
Wordsley Rectory near Stourbridge
Following Wordsley becoming a separate Ecclesiastical parish in 1830, the Rectory was built in 1835-6 by the architect Lewis Vulliamy, who also built the nearby Holy Trinity Church at this time. The Rectory ...
Worston Hall, Little Bridgeford
Worston Hall stands on Worston Lane at Little Bridgeford. Kelly's Directory of 1896 states that the Hall had lately been rebuilt on a pleasant elevation above the river. By 1901 it was occupied by Josiah ...
Yarlet Hall
A postcard view of Yarlet Hall which replaced an earlier 18th century building, work on a new house was begun around 1870 by George Sidney. In 1873 the Reverend Walter Earle founded a private preparatory ...