Wolverhampton Die Casting Co., Paul Street, Wolverhampton
Wolverhampton Die Casting Company, acquired the factory in 1955 and closed it in 1966 (together with their Ludlow factory). It was sold to Barrs Industrial. By 1968 it was again used for die-casting by ...
Wolverhampton Gas Works
The entrance to the yard at the Gas Works, which was situated off the Stafford Road, Wolverhampton.
Wolverhampton Gas Works opened in 1849. It was situated close to the canal to expedite coal deliveries ...
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
Camden Place on Wolverhampton Road. It was built for Richard Ford in the early nineteenth century and designed by George Gilbert Scott. In the 1960s it was used as an annex to the College of Art, but ...
Wolverhampton Road, Stafford
Taken from the junction of Garden Street and the Wolverhampton Road, the buildings to the left of the distant building with the two gables and paired windows (which is Spice Island restaurant in 2025) ...
Women’s Institute Flower Bed, Victoria Park, Stafford
This colourful flower bed in Victoria Park was created to commemorate 70 years of the Women’s Institute (WI) in Staffordshire. This photograph was taken by Stafford photographer Tony Boydon.
Worthington family car, Seighford
Members of the Worthington family of Seighford in their car. Jack Worthington set up a successful coach company in the 1920s.
Worthington family car, Seighford
A member of the Worthington family of Seighford in the family car. Jack Worthington set up a successful coach company in the 1920s.
WW1 Belgian Refugees by the Market Cross, High Street, Newcastle-under-Lyme
John Black is the piper. He was a police constable with Newcastle constabulary.