From The Muniment Room, a resource for social history, family history, and local history.
Middle Stoneham, also known as plain Middle, or Middle Street, was a scattered village on the Stoneham Estate, and was often described as North Stoneham village. It adjoined the northern boundary of North Stoneham Park. The area south of the village was known as Church End.
Selected views
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Middle Stoneham from postcard c.1910, looking northwest from Stoneham Lane: Durmans farmhouse (right) with glimpse of rear of Cottages No. 37-38 beyond (left).
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Middle Stoneham c.1900: looking southeast across Spring Lane at Cottages Nos. 39-44, a row of six cottages at the north end of Spring Lane.
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Chestnut Avenue [?}
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Gazetteer
| Estate Plan | 1818 Survey
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Chestnut Avenue, north side from west | |
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Cottage No. 20 | 140 |
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Cottage No. 21 | 138 |
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Cottage No. 22 | 137 |
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The Pound | |
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Barracks (3 cottages) | 180 |
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Cottages Nos. 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, & 31 (Terrace of 6 cottages) | 181 |
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Cricketers Arms, formerly Yew Tree Farm | 182 |
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Cottages Nos. 32-33 (Post House) | 186 |
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Cottages No. 35-36 | 190 |
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Durmans farmhouse (Middle Farm) | 222 |
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Chestnut Avenue, south side from west | |
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Winchester Lodge | |
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Doncaster Farm buildings and yard, also known as Bull Farm buildings | |
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Stoneham War Shrine | |
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Cottage No. 34 (Forge) | |
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Doncaster Cottage | 220 |
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Spring Lane (Magpie Lane), east side from south | |
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Cottages No. 37-38 (inc. the White Cottage) | 188 & 189 |
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Cottages Nos. 39-44 (Terrace of six cottages) | 132 |
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Spring Lane (Magpie Lane), west side | |
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Cottages Nos. 45-46, known as Yonder Thatch | 131 |
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North of Spring Lane (Magpie Lane) | |
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Spring Lane ford | |
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Cottage No. 47 (Cottages east of ford, towards gasworks?) | 104 |
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Near the Forge | |
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Cottage (51?) | |
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Church End | |
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North Stoneham School | |
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North Stoneham Rectory | |
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Temple Lodge | |
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North Stoneham Church | |
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Ford at Doncaster Drove | |
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Selected views of Church End