Website produced and maintained for the Hungerford Historical Association by Hugh Pihlens.
Getting the most from Search...
The Search box is at the top-left (or top-right) corner of all pages.
Use it to find topics of your choice, wherever they occur in the Virtual Museum. You may search for names, places, dates - anything!
Please note that many family names have a variety of spellings, such as Wodham and Woodham, Pearse and Pearce, Clisdel, Clisdale and Clidsdall.
Consider alternative spellings for everything! If you are looking for trades, note that you may find "plumber" often spelt "plummer", or "maltster" spelt "malster" in 18th century documents.
Questions for the community of Facebook followers are best sent via Facebook.
Crown Post Office, 126 High Street, Feb 2007
Lower High Street c1908, showing Earle's engineering workshop on the left - later demolished for the Crown Post Office to be built.
Do you know what the litle black brisk space is for? See the next photograph to find out!
The policeman on the beat could step in it and pull up on the handles to reach high enough to view the Post Office safe through a clear slit in the obscured windows. (With thanks to Bryan Bint). Jul 2014.
Crown Post Office, 126 High Street, Jun 1990 (John Allen).
Hungerford, England, is a market town of about 5,900 people at the Berkshire / Wiltshire border. Find us
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