Old Rothley Photographs Album 6 Barrie Pook Collection
Barrie Pook has a wonderful collection of old postcards of great interest to the village. Reproduced here with the kind permission of Barrie Pook.
Further information to be added but, in the meantime, these could get you guessing!
Nott Bridge features a lot on old postcards and like so many hump-back bridges it was replaced to ease the traffic and when Rothley Brook was not needed as a navigable waterway. On the photographs looking to the Loughborough Road you can see the track used to ford the brook.
Nott Bridge, Hallfields Lane, Rothley.
Nott Bridge, Hallfields Lane, looking to Town Green St.
Nott Bridge, Hallfields Lane looking to Loughborough Road
Nott Bridge, Hallfields Lane, looking to Loughborough Road
Nott Bridge, Hallfields Lane, looking to Loughborough Road
Nott Bridge, Hallfields Lane, looking to Loughborough Road.
Reverse of the above postcard
Nott Bridge, Hallfields Lane, looking to Loughborough Road.
Howe Lane, Rothley. This lane runs between Woodgate and Town Green Street
Reverse of the above postcard
Cross Green on the left and Woodgate on the right.
Church Street on the left, Fowke Street upper right and Rothley Park with the cricket pavilion lower right.
Reverse of the above postcard showing that it was printed for the local newsagent, Thompson's of Woodgate
Woodgate looking to Cross Green
Reverse of the above postcard
Woodgate looking to Cross Green
Westfield Lane looking to Rothley Station
Westfield Lane looking to Rothley Station
The Charnwood Room, Swithland Lane, Rothley
Reverse of the above showing it as Charnwood, Rothley, Leicester. Kindergarten Room
It took some time to find out where the Charnwood Room was in a kindergarten but I remember being told that there was a kindergarten on the Swithland Lane opposite Railway Cottages. Looking at the design of the windows from the internal view, especially the porthole, we rang the bell of Charnwood House, Swithland Lane and there was our room almost identical in 2011. With thanks to the owners for satisfying our curiosity.
Anthony Street
The area around Cross Green features many times on Rothley postcards and shows how much the thatched cottages have been demolished. The War Memorial was erected in 1921 and the trees planted around 1904.
Cross Green 1947
Reverse of the above postcard
Cross Green early 1900's. All the thatched cottages have been demolished.
Cross Green early 1900's. The large building on the right is now the Royal Oak.
Cross Green 1925. The thatched cottages are still there, later demolished.
Reverse of the above postcard
Cross Green early 1900's
Rothley Carnival, Cross Green, 1917
Cross Green without its thatched cottages
Anthony Street looking to Cross Green
Anthony Street looking to Cross Green
Town Green
Town Green. The beech tree was planted for the Coronation in 1953
Town Green Street, known as Uptown, looking to Wellsic Lane
Reverse of the above postcard
Town Green Street looking to North Street/Hallfields Lane
North Street looking to Hallfields Lane
The scene above shows North Street around 1913 and the lady looking out at the photographer is Fanny Emerson (nee Bunney) with her daughter Fanny Jane, known as Ginny. They are watching from their shop which was a General Store, now two houses.
The man on the right of the group in the road is Jack Emerson, husband to Fanny, who was a Cobbler.
With thanks to Bob Lovett for the above information, he is the son of Fanny Jane the little girl shown above.
Reverse of the above postcard
North Street
Woodgate looking to the village centre with Wellsic Lane running to the right.
Woodgate and Wellsic Lane as above with the card dated 1905
Reverse of the above postcard
Mountsorrel Lane. This view is opposite Rothley Library (2010). The end house was called Forest View and demolished.
Reverse of the above postcard dated 1908
Mountsorrel Lane close to Cross Green. Ranters Row, as the terrace was known, to the right. The Primitive Methodist Chapel on the left at the back is now a private house (2010)
Rood House, Town Green Street, corner of Howe Lane
Reverse of the above postcard dated 1909
Rothley Station, the Great Central Line, in Edwardian times
Reverse of the above postcard
Fowke Street looking towards The Grange
Fowke Street looking to Cross Green in the early 1900's
Fowke Street with The Grange
Fowke Street and The Grange
The Old School in School Street, now the Old School Rooms.
The White House, Church Street 1927
The White House, Church Street 1906
Reverse of the above postcard
Church Street looking to the church
Reverse of the above postcard
Rothley Parish Church
Rothley Parish Church in the centre. From top left: Woodgate shops from Woodgate, Hallfields Lane, Woodgate shops from Cross Green and Town Green
Rothley Temple (now Rothley Court Hotel)from the rear side
Gatehouse at the entrance to the Rothley Temple
Westfield Lane with gatehouse to the Rothley Temple. Note the cattle grazing on the verges.
Rear view of Rothley Temple taken from the bank of the Rothley Brook
Rear side view of Rothley Temple 1906
Rear view of Rothley Temple taken from the bank of the Rothley Brook 1905
Front of Rothley Temple with the Chapel of the Knights Templar
Rear view of Rothley Temple
971 Loughborough Road, Rothley 1905
Swithland Lane, Rothley looking to Kinchley Lane
On the ice 1917 Union Lane (Linkfield Road)
(Note: 1917 was a cold, prolonged winter especially in Central England. A temperature of 36F below freezing was recorded on the 6th February in one county. This was a time for skating on the thick ice on rivers and lakes so this postcard would have been produced to record that bitterly cold winter)
To go to the list of albums of old photographs please click on the following link: