JohnnieWalker
Sanctuary Point, Australia |
16 of 113
Fri 17th May 2013 11:20pm
Elsewhere I've related my memories of my great grandfather, Joe Dyson, who was apparently quite an athlete in his day. He and his wife lived in a tiny old house - I believe an old miners' house off the "tramway" along an arm of the canal off Deedmore Road. In my teens, I used to go jogging along the tramway - by then just a coal-dust road, with "clod banks" all around. His daughter, May Bicknell, and her husband Les, lived not far away in Townsend Cottage between the two hump bridges on Deedmore Rd. All of this is now long gone, but I found an 1887 map of the area and a 1926 map of the same area. Interesting that in 1926, Deedmore Road is known as Colliery Lane. Does anyone else have memories of around that part of the world.
1887
1926
True Blue Coventry Kid
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Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
mickw
nuneaton |
17 of 113
Sun 5th Jan 2014 12:45am
On 20th Feb 2013 3:16pm, gangan said:
The original Walsgrave WMC was in Woodway Lane, on the right on the bend just up from the Ansty Road. My late father was a member there in the 50's and 60's. If my memory serves me correctly, the building was a couple of miners cottages. A snooker table in the room on the left as you went in. There was a huge garden with a bowling green at the rear. The ceilings were very low as I recall. I have no idea when it was flattened. Also, I went to school with Ashley Stevens (or Stephens) who lived in the large white house which stood next to the newsagents on the corner of Woodway Lane/Ansty Road. This house was demolished fairly recently I believe. If anyone has more info, I would appreciate their sharing it with us please
Hi gangan. My wife and I bought 42 Woodway Lane in early 1981 which is just 8 doors up from the old WMC. The building was still standing when we moved in to the house in the September of 81. Not long after the building was demolished - unbeknown to us the local residents had long complained to Hall Bros, the owners of the old club building, that it was overrun with rats so Robert Hall eventually demolished it to stop all the hastle from the local residents. When I got to know the neighbours they told me that Halls had offered them £1,000 for 3 metres of garden to build a service road, they also offered to build a garage for each house but they all refused because of the rat fiasco. As a builder I was a bit gutted to say the least, also I used the new club on Sunday lunchtimes. I used to go up with a couple of neighbours, one of which was called Reg Plumb, who used the old club. I`ll always remember him as his membership number was 3, he was in his late 70s then, so just wondering if the name rings any bells from the old club as he used to talk fondly of it |
Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
flapdoodle
Coventry |
18 of 113
Sun 5th Jan 2014 6:57pm
Fascinating, that area has changed so much - I read a description of it from the 1950s/1960s where it was described as being cluttered up with old railway lines and industrial buildings.
Looking on Google Earth, I can see absolutely no indications of the canal basin and the remains of any railway line - no earthworks or anything showing that there was something else there. There are lots of paths in the area. Are any of these based on the former route of the mineral railway?
It seems some of the paths ARE on the route of this railway |
Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
heritage
Bedworth |
19 of 113
Mon 6th Jan 2014 2:22pm
As so often happens on this forum, posts coincide with ongoing research.
Using research from the late Laurence Fretwell I have been working on the Wyken group of pits which were in the Deedmoor Road/Woodway Lane area. One of which was the Alexandra and was linked with the Wyken and Craven pits.
The sketch maps show the relationship between the pits and the line of the railway from the LNWR line.
When complete the research will be part of a new mining exhibition at Bedworth Heritage Centre planned for early spring.
The sketch maps drawn by Laurence Fretwell give an appreciation of where the pits were situated.
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Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
mickw
nuneaton |
20 of 113
Mon 6th Jan 2014 4:06pm
Thanks for that heritage. I used to use the Boat Inn in Deedmore Road occasionally and someone in there told me the canal ran at the back of the pub years ago, which I couldn't see why at the time, but your maps prove it now. Apologies to old Jim at the Boat, you were right |
Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
Greg
Coventry |
21 of 113
Tue 7th Jan 2014 6:41pm
If you turn right from Ringwood Highway into Shilton Lane, almost opposite (at the left of the first bungalow) you will see some trees behind railings. This was the canal arm to the colliery. The colliery basin is still in use by a canal society but was linked through another basin to the main canal (under the M6). You can also see where the canal arm used to go behind the gardens, on the opposite side of Shilton Lane. |
Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks |
22 of 113
Tue 7th Jan 2014 10:31pm
Hi all
The "old canal arm" was still in situ, even after the housing estate around Felton Close was built, but I believe that a local petition after a drowning tragedy resulted in the arm being filled in. The iron footbridge, which crossed the arm junction at Woodway Lane, now crosses the Sherbourne near to Spon End. Some of the Alex working tunnels may still be hollow & flooded as at one time, local residents reported of hearing ghostly noises, even when they have not just come home from the pub. Changing water levels may force air from one cavity to another. Thank you all for your posts on this fascinating piece of local history. Please keep it coming & correct me if I am mistaken. |
Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
deanocity3
keresley |
23 of 113
Sun 12th Jan 2014 11:46am
More info here at Coventry Walks |
Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
monty703
coventry |
24 of 113
Thu 11th Sep 2014 8:24pm
Does anybody remember the old Co-op in Woodway Lane? Question colin halls
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Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
NormK
bulkington |
25 of 113
Thu 11th Sep 2014 9:18pm
If it was opposite Henley Road, yep... Milly rules
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Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
Greg
Coventry |
26 of 113
Fri 12th Sep 2014 3:18pm
Now one of the thousands of betting shops!! |
Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
27 of 113
Sat 25th Oct 2014 5:52pm
Heritage, hi, now the map on 20 I think is slightly out, I believe the old canal extended over Woodway Lane, there were two cottages stood facing the canal, sideways on to the road. I'm hazy about what was next but then there was a bit of the old canal and next to was Lesters wood yard, ran back from the road alongside the old canal, not sure how far away stood the little school, I believe the graveyard was opposite the wood yard. I would visit the wood yard with my dad, he bought plywood tea chests at sixpence each to make toys, and we carried them back along the railway to Tusses Bridge.
Now Johnnie Walker, hi, I think next to Dysons the Wyken Cottages were attached, they woke up one morning to find a bottomless pit outside their front door about ten yards across, it was about two inches away from the front corner of the building, frightened me, think sometime in the middle thirties, shouldn't be hard to check out. I posted this on the Slough thread. Now somebody like to help me out, who owned The Jolly Colliers about 1880?
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Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
NormK
bulkington |
28 of 113
Sat 25th Oct 2014 6:03pm
According to the Real Ale Rambles site, the licensee in 1879 was Enoch Simpson and in 1888 it was Thomas Simpson Milly rules
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Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
Greg
Coventry |
29 of 113
Sat 25th Oct 2014 7:48pm
Kaga, the only remaining sign of that railway is a level crossing gate post. It stands at the back of the pavement, on Woodway Lane, and was reinstated after the nearby houses were built a few years ago. |
Coventry Suburbs and Beyond - Woodway Lane and Potters Green | |
JohnnieWalker
Sanctuary Point, Australia |
30 of 113
Sun 26th Oct 2014 1:00am
On 25th Oct 2014 5:52pm, Kaga simpson said:
Now Johnnie Walker, Hi, I think next to Dysons the Wyken Cottages were attached, they woke up one morning to find a bottomless pit outside there front door about ten yards across, it was about two inches away from the front corner of the building, frightened me, think sometime in the middle thirties, shouldn't be hard to check out
I posted this on the slough forum. now somebody like to help me out, who owned The Jolly Colliers about 1880?
Hi Kaga
I'm pleased to see someone remembers the Dysons! I have vague memories of the Christmas parties there in the very late 1940s, although I could have been only two or three years old. The little cottage packed out with people, and my great grandfather Joe's sports trophies on the sideboard along with some impressive crockery. There was an old lady living next door - whose name I've forgotten - I will remember it if prompted. She sent me a birthday card when I was around seven or eight, and I commented on her scrawly handwriting, only to be quite rightly rebuked because she was then in her nineties, I believe.
As for the Colliers, I think my uncle tried to "own it" when he was in his teens, their products being one of his favourite investments but that would have been in the mid-1950s.
True Blue Coventry Kid
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