EAW008860 ENGLAND (1947). The town centre, Northampton, from the south-west, 1947

© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.

Delweddau cyfagos (15)

EAW008860
  0° 0m
EAW008858
  172° 8m
EPW057748
  93° 38m
EPW057749
  49° 63m
EPW057745
  61° 70m
EPW057746
  287° 75m
EPW045599
  147° 157m
EPW034342
  211° 166m
EAW025947
  96° 195m
EAW043373
  294° 202m
EAW008859
  71° 205m
EAW009510
  140° 235m
EPW057744
  179° 241m
EAW009511
  69° 252m
EAW043375
  290° 263m

Manylion

Pennawd [EAW008860] The town centre, Northampton, from the south-west, 1947
Cyfeirnod EAW008860
Dyddiad 9-August-1947
Dolen
Enw lle NORTHAMPTON
Plwyf
Ardal
Gwlad ENGLAND
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad 475397, 260456
Hydred / Lledred -0.89577090003841, 52.236728621921
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol SP754605

Pinnau

Salvation Army Citadel

gsward
Sunday 12th of December 2021 01:46:32 PM
Horsemarket Primitive Methodist Chapel

gsward
Sunday 12th of December 2021 01:45:48 PM
King Street Independent Chapel (closed)

gsward
Sunday 12th of December 2021 01:44:41 PM
St Catherine

gsward
Sunday 12th of December 2021 01:43:54 PM
John Clare School

PaulH
Friday 5th of July 2019 08:42:02 PM
Lady’s Lane

PaulH
Friday 5th of July 2019 08:38:22 PM
Northampton Racecourse: former racecourse, now park. My photo is similar shot taken 2014, but taken from WSW rather than SW, and from a position further to the N. The 1947 shot shows an encampment on the site. Apparently not military, so perhaps Boy Scouts? Racing ceased in 1904, owing a high number of accidents, which included fatalities, caused by the sharp turns on the track. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Racecourse,_Northampton and http://www.britainfromabove.org.uk/image/eaw028098?search=northampton&ref=79

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 08:02:31 PM
The Ridings. This area is now a car park. I understood it once to have been a communal area for the riding of horses, but there is not a space large enough shown here.

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 07:50:13 PM
Co-op Department Store and Arcade

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 07:28:44 PM

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 07:25:34 PM
Emporium Arcade

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 07:22:44 PM
Military Road Primary School

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 07:21:32 PM
Market Square

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 07:20:19 PM

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 07:19:38 PM
Louise Road. The houses backed onto the Racecourse (park), hence a good place to bring up children!

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 07:18:47 PM
Police Station

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 07:15:40 PM
Fire station

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 07:15:02 PM
Municipal Swimming Pool and slipper baths. The latter a source of fascination and curiosity for local schoolchildren. The swimming pool had a little tick shop which sold "dog biscuits" to hungry swimmers. Think they must have been sea biscuits.

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 07:14:11 PM
St. Mary's Junior and Infants School (catholic) in The Mounts. It backed onto Notre Dame High School. Children who passed the "11+" examination could then take the entrance examination with a view to attending the latter. The Notre Dame nuns used to collect up the fallen apples and pears from the trees in the "Convent Garden", cut off the bad bits, and bring the good fruit in a basket for the children. The school had a good reputation, and dedicated staff. Worst thing about it was the crates of empty milk bottles in the entrance, which stank of sour milk. Free school milk was a legacy of a deprived post-war Britain, meant to protect the needs of children. Though no longer a necessity, it was compulsory drinking for pupils. In those days nobody liked to challenge the "Authorities", even if it meant pupils being sick (the sour milk stench had far-reaching effects!). It was closed and demolished around the same time as Notre Dame High School, i.e. 1975.

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 11:17:40 AM
Notre Dame High School (parent association: Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur). The Northampton School was established in 1852 after a merger of two Orders. The Sisters of Jesus who had been resident in Northampton since 1845 were in danger of closure as four of their Sisters had died in a typhus epidemic and so it was suggested that they join the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. In the 19th and early 20th centuries Northampton had a very small Catholic community, so the school had a large number of non-Catholic students. In 1870 a new building was erected dominating the eastern end of Abington Street in the town centre. There were additions to the school buildings in 1938 and in 1950 a Domestic Science and Biology block was built. By 1970 the building was obviously unsuitable for the needs of a modern Comprehensive school and its future became doubtful. The school closed in 1975 and the building was demolished. Existing pupils transferred to the Thomas Becket Comprehensive School. See: http://www.bfndn.org/Northampton.htm The "pin" is on the exquisite chapel, which along with some ancient trees, beautiful gardens, were simply flattened when bulldozers moved in on a Sunday morning. To the shame of the local Council, the main school building, a prominent and elegant structure on Abindgdon Street, likewise received no preferential treatment, and what should have been a lovingly preserved Listed Building was simply razed to ground to make way for a modern shopping centre.

Ericferret
Tuesday 25th of November 2014 11:01:22 AM