1
Pitmans Funeralcare, Weston-super-Mare
A Co-op Funeralcare at 40 Milton Road.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 6 Sep 2018
0.02 miles
2
Phonebox outside Sue's News, Weston-super-Mare
On the Milton Road side of the shop https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/5897514 on the corner of Ashcombe Road.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 6 Sep 2018
0.02 miles
3
The fallen of many nations
At the bottom of Milton Road cemetery is a plaque - part of the Wonders of Weston art programme.
The cemetery contains the graves of several other nations: over 100 Belgians fled the horrors of the First World War, and some eventually perished in Weston; in the Second World War, the town was badly hit by the Luftwaffe - but a Heinkel He 111 was shot down on 4th April, 1941, and the crew interred here along with some of their victims.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 10 Jun 2013
0.03 miles
4
Information notice for Milton Road Cemetery, Weston-super-Mare
Weston-super-Mare Town Council notice facing Milton Road at the southern entrance to this https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/5916375 cemetery.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 6 Sep 2018
0.03 miles
5
Sue's News, Milton
Image: © Roger Cornfoot
Taken: 31 Jan 2018
0.03 miles
6
Sue's News on a Weston-super-Mare corner
Shop at 42 Milton Road on the corner of Ashcombe Road.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 6 Sep 2018
0.03 miles
7
Elmhyrst Road, Weston-super-Mare
Cul-de-sac ascending from the north side of Milton Road.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 6 Sep 2018
0.03 miles
8
Former Milton Road Cemetery Lodge, Weston-super-Mare
The former lodge at the Milton Road entrance to the cemetery is now in residential use.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 6 Sep 2018
0.03 miles
9
Old-style signpost, Milton Road, Weston-super-Mare
Pointing the way to Bristol and to Weston-super-Mare seafront, the signpost is near the southern entrance to Milton Road Cemetery.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 6 Sep 2018
0.03 miles
10
Traffic lights at the western end of Colonel Stephens Way, Weston-super-Mare
At the Ashcombe Road junction. Colonel Stephens Way follows the trackbed of the Weston, Clevedon & Portishead Light Railway (WC&PR), an independent light railway linking three North Somerset coastal towns. First planned in 1844, it opened in 1897 and closed in 1940.
Colonel Holman Fred Stephens took over the running of the WC&PR in 1911. He was known as the Light Railway King because he ran a number of similar railways, and he got the costs under control. He managed the railway mostly from his base in Tonbridge, Kent. After his death in 1931 the railway declined.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 6 Sep 2018
0.03 miles