Browse Items (22 total)

  • Collection: The Moor

B&W summer view with red lettering-possibly a Peck's series from the early 1900s.

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View of The Moor from the junction with Orchard Lane. Poor focus.

2 photos of front and 2 of the east wall. The (presumed) proprietor appears in one of each.

A row of thatched cottages on Orchard Lane, Reepham Moor once known as Stocks Hill Cottages, demolished circa 1939.

Thatched cottage near the corner of The Moor where it meets Orchard Lane. Two army cyclists are pictured about 1917, with a woman who was possibly Mrs. Self, mother of Charlie Self.

View of the house advertised for sale, from an undated newspaper cutting placed by the agents. Very brief note included.

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Old sepia postcard of part of Reepham Moor showing the house called The Old Monastery on the left.

Postcard of the junction of the Moor with the bottom of New Road (on the right) & looking towards the Norwich Road. High hedging replaces/hides the picket fence.

Two views, taken at different times, of the row of cottages on the left of the road that leads up towards Orchard Lane. The shop was a grocer's business run by Martin Luther Dewing. The barn-type building in the second picture still looks the same.

Two views of the corner where the Moor reaches Norwich Road. The signpost looks newly erected in the first image.

Postcard showing the entrance to the Moor House on the left with gardener's house visible behind the fence. The Black Lion public house can just be seen through the trees.

A comprehensive history of Reepham Moor, including an account of Moor House, tithes and dwellings on The Moor.

Group of 8 smartly dressed men and 1 child in front of a wall on Reepham Moor

Copy of a sepia postcard showing Reepham Moor. In the distance can be seen a man with a cart and a lady in a long dress.

Moor Lodge was for many years the home of Herbert Temple Owen, manager of Barclays Bank in Reepham. His wife Annie was the youngest daughter of Rev. M. Wilkinson.

Two similar views of the house from the drive and one of the conservatory.

The glasshouse at the Moor House was restored in the 1990s. The views include three of the exterior, one before the work was competed. One of the interior photographs shows the trunk of a vine that Ann Bircham remembered being there in the…

View of the front of the house.
Tuck postcard RPHM 8.

B&W undated winter view with white handwritten lettering.

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Undated colour aerial view, taken later than the B&W view.
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