Tixall Bridge, near Milford
This Is the bridge over the Sow in Holdiford Road, Milford at the point where the river is the boundary between Berkswich and Tixall parishes.
Postcard published by William Shaw of Burslem.
Tixall Hall and Gatehouse: water colour painting
'Tixall.' Showing a three storey Jacobean gatehouse and a two storey Georgian Hall behind, in a park with a river winding in the foreground. There are also two arches of a bridge to the left in the ...
Town Mill, Stafford
The town mill was built by George Brewster in 1834, on the site of the medieval town mill. It was powered by two wheels, fed from the mill pool by a culvert running under the road.
The mill was demolished ...
Trentham Boating Lake,
Trentham Hall was built in the 1630s for the Dukes of Sutherland. The Caroline house was replaced in the early eighteenth century by one in a Classical style. Capability Brown and Henry Holland worked ...
Two Waters Way, Stafford
Looking south west towards Kingston Hill and Tixall Road, the two new bridges pictured form part of a new pedestrian and cycle route over the Rivers Penk and Sow along with an elevated section across ...
Victoria Bridge, Stafford
Lantern slide view of the original Victoria Bridge over the River Sow. The foreground area is now Victoria Park. the bridge was originally built in the 1860s and was replaced by the current bridge in ...
Victoria Park, Stafford
The land between Izaak Walton Walk and the railway station was marshy and liable to flooding. In 1903 the Corporation bought the land and raised its level by three feet. The area was laid out as Victoria ...
Victoria Park, Stafford
Watercolour painting by Jean Margaret Peace. A View of Victoria Park in November, about 1950.
The land between Izaak Walton Walk and the railway station was marshy and liable to flooding. In 1903 the ...
Victoria Park, Stafford
A view of Victoria Park looking from the site of the Mill towards the bandstand and the aviary. The land between Izaak Walton Walk and the railway station were marshy and liable to flooding. In 1903 ...
Victoria Park, Stafford
The land between Izaak Walton Walk and the railway station was marshy and liable to flooding. In 1903 the Corporation bought the land and raised its level by three feet. The area was laid out as Victoria ...
Victoria Park, Stafford
This postcard view shows flowerbeds in front of the thatched shelter on the left which has the bowling green on the opposite side.
In the background another thatched structure can be seen which houses ...
Victoria Park, Stafford
The land between Izaak Walton Walk and the railway station was marshy and liable to flooding. In 1903 the Corporation bought the land and raised its level by three feet. The area was laid out as Victoria ...
Victoria Park, Stafford
The land between Izaak Walton Walk and the railway station was marshy and liable to flooding. In 1903 the Corporation bought the land and raised its level by three feet. The area was laid out as Victoria ...
Victoria Park, Stafford
The land between Izaak Walton Walk and the railway station was marshy and liable to flooding. In 1903 the Corporation bought the land and raised its level by three feet. The area was laid out as Victoria ...
Victoria Park,Stafford
A composite postcard with six colour-tinted scenes of Stafford. The views are of Victoria Park and the Mill Pool.
Postcard posted from Basingstoke in 1926 to an address in Stafford.
View of Stafford from Newport Road,
The area in the foreground, between Izaak Walton Walk and the railway station, was marshy and liable to flooding. In 1903 the Corporation bought the land and raised its level by three feet. The area ...
View of Stafford from the River Sow
Watercolour painting by John Louis Petit (1801-1868). A view of Stafford roughly from the site of the present Queensway bridge.
In the foreground is the River Sow, with the towers of St. Mary's Church ...
Watching the Firemen, Stafford
Photograph shows three boys sitting on the banks of the river Sow watching a fire practice on the sports field opposite.
Reproduced by Kind Permission of the Staffordshire Newsletter who retain copyright....