Browse the Spondon History Archives...
- Geographical
- Streets
- Anglers Lane
- Acorn Way
- Arundel Drive
- Arnhem Terrace
- Avondale Road
- Badger Close
- Bankfield Drive
- Beeches Avenue
- Borrowash bypass
- Borrowfield Road
- Borrowash Road
- Brockley
- Brunswood Close
- Cambridge Street
- Chaffinch Close
- Chapel Lane
- Chapel Street
- Cherry Tree Hill
- Church Hill
- Church Street
- Coxon Street
- Croft Close
- Dale Road
- Derby Road
- Drury Avenue
- Gladstone Road
- Gravel Pit Lane
- Edmund Road
- Hall Dyke
- Hamilton Road
- Hill Close
- Huntley Avenue
- Kirkleys Avenue
- Locko Road
- Lodge Lane
- Lousie Greaves Lane
- Marl Pit Close
- Megaloughton Lane
- Merchant Avenue
- Milldale Road
- Mill Row
- Moor End
- Moor Street
- Moult Avenue
- Nottingham Road
- Oxford Street
- Park Road
- Pheasant Fields Road
- Poplar Avenue
- Potter Street
- Reader Street
- Royal Hill Road
- Sancroft Road
- Sandringham Drive
- Sants Row
- Sitwell Street
- Station Road
- Stoney Lane
- Sunningdale Avenue
- Vancouver Avenue
- West Road
- Willowcroft Road
- Locations
- Views
- Maps
- Streets
- Schools
- Transport
- People
- Families
- Antill
- Astle
- Aston
- Aukland
- Bailey
- Barber
- Barnes
- Barr
- Barron
- Battelle
- Biggins
- Booker
- Bostock
- Brighouse
- Brinsley
- Cade
- Carrington
- Clark
- Coxon
- Davis
- Dixon
- Douglass
- Dunnicliff
- Elson
- Fowler
- Franks
- Gardiner
- Gascoigne
- Glover
- Green
- Grundy
- Hastings
- Hatton
- Hill
- Holbrook
- Holmes
- Hooley
- Kenedy
- King
- Land
- Lather
- Lewty
- Lilly
- Littlewood
- Lowe
- Maddocks
- Martin
- Mather
- Meakin
- Monton
- Osborne
- Osbiston
- Piggin
- Porter
- Priestland
- Ranby
- Seale
- Sims
- Sinfoil/Shaw
- Slater
- Stanton
- Stevens
- Stone
- Stubbs
- Thompson
- Three from Oz
- Topham
- Walker-Smith
- Ward
- Watts
- Werburgh
- Wheatley
- White
- Whiteman
- Wilmot
- Winfield
- Woodhead
- Wright
- Woolley
- Various
- Groups
- Sports Teams
- British Celanese Intermediate under 18s Team
- British Celanese Lawn Tennis Club
- British Celanese Weaving Team (Open Age)
- Charity Match
- Derby Community Football League
- Fishing
- Soller Cup
- Spondon Athletic Football Club
- Spondon Bowls Club
- Spondon Church Boys Football Club
- Spondon Cricket Club
- Spondon Ladies Football Team
- Spondon Power Station
- Spondon Rangers
- Spondon Rovers Football Club
- Spondon Rovers Juniors Football Club
- Spondon St Werburgh's Church Bible Class Football Team
- Stanley Excelsior F C
- Vicars
- Workplaces
- Families
- Buildings
- Artefacts
- Events
Similar images...
we, as children, were
we, as children, were fortunate to experience Clock Farm as a farm as we played in the fields and around the buildings. there were no houses on the prefab estate or on the council house estate, the filds and woods stretched from nottingham road north to the bypass, which was an open dirt track for the most part, and bordered by Mr Simms farm towards Borrowash and to the brool at the bottom of borrowfield rd and the ressed Nottingham road just east of the Anglers Arms.
around 1950 a Mr Martin from Borroweash, the last house on the right going to Hopwell on the A52, rented the Farm and Mrs Tunnicliffe ran a riding school out of there. Jimmy, her son recently deceased, also helped us learn to harness and tackle up the group of horses. Dingo, was brocken to saddle and harness so we had many happy hours with the trap around the village, there was, Kitty, Lady Grey, Shawn ( Mrs Tunnies horse), Dolly, Dingo and a no name donkey. donkeys don't need names, they are not going to listen anyway. Bruce was the golden retriever. the famous rides were to the golden gates at elvaston, stoney lane to dale road. we spent many happy hours cleaning stalls , learning to prepare and clean tackle, gooming, feeding, avoiding hooves! there were proper horse stalls on the west side of the buildings and cow sheds on the east side with loose boxes and the loft behind the clock on the northe side; behind that was a dutch barn and the the west a tractor shed facing the house. the trip to breadsall smithy was a really great outing; took a while too. climbing up to the clock at the farm was tricky, especially for me , the smallest, climbing on the pigsy slate roof was a neat trick too. there were two tractors in the barn, an old Fordson about 1930, and a more modern Ferguson, about 1945 or so.
funny to remember brooks, woods and fields where now there are roads and houses. every generation has the same problem though i guess.
the horses moved to the farm at the Catholic house farm around 1952 or 3 i think and Lady Grey stayed on there with new owner Mr Reg Slaney and Mrs Tunny went off to the area under the wires in the council house estate. preior to that move though we had many happy times on the Catholic farm lands, swimming horses in the cut, catching them down the tow path to spondon when they got out. racing aound th fields there and especially over the canal bridge that still stands.