once I had made the connection ... there it was; turned into a house with plastic windows (yuck!); I am unsure if it was occupied. But it is so good to see a piece of our history still standing.
no sure if the same fail sill live there bu i do remember that the family had 3 daughters one of the daughters now live at manor way and her husband is a postman the 3 daughters had lovely blonde hair but i cant remember if the two oldest girls were twins the youngest daughter and the postmans wife have children not sure about the 3rd daughter i believe there used to be a grandmother living there also mind you thats wen i was at heamoor cp school i left there wen i wAS 11yrs old one of the girls was called
I have the same problem with ships that are converted and modernised, but the plain fact is that, without that, the basic and important part of our history will be relegated to the rubbish tip; that is my main complaint, where our heritage is being blatantly destroyed and removed, without trace; I want to see just how a stone wall was built, and how the timbers were put together for the roof, instead of the heartless rendering and covering in with sheets. Good design can and should include the old work.
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