1
The main drag in Princes Risborough
It's actually Bell Street and a lovely post office building was recently knocked down in the last few years to be replaced by the miserable looking shops on the right.
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 20 Mar 2016
0.01 miles
2
The Bell, Princes Risborough
In Bell Street, opposite Bell Lane.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 17 Feb 2015
0.01 miles
3
Princes Risborough - The Bell
"Your proud local" on busy Bell Street.
Image: © Colin Smith
Taken: 16 Aug 2016
0.01 miles
4
Princes Risborough: The Library
The library was built in 1986 on Bell Street and was opened by the Rt Hon Richard Luce MP, the then Minister for Arts and Libraries, on 13 October of that year.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 30 Mar 2008
0.02 miles
5
Baldy's on Bell Street, Princes Risborough
Yes, it's a barber's, previously called Classic Barbers
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 20 Mar 2016
0.04 miles
6
House and shop on Bell Street
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 20 Mar 2016
0.05 miles
7
Bell Street, Princes Risborough
At the junction with High Street.
Pentax ESII camera with 3.5/35 Takumar lens, on Kodak BW400CN film
Image: © Peter Taylor
Taken: 15 Aug 2009
0.06 miles
8
Gatensbury Place, Princes Risborough
This is sheltered accommodation for the elderly
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 20 Mar 2016
0.06 miles
9
Princes Risborough: The Pudding Stone
The pudding stone is seen here, set in setts, and surrounded by a sea of yellow pansies, on the south-east side of the roundabout at the junction of Bell Street and New Road.
The Princes Risborough Area Heritage Society plaque nearby describes it thus:
"Puddingstone boulders such as this are thought to have been used as way-markers by prehistoric man, and this one stood in Back Lane, though latterly largely unobserved and buried for all but a few inches. It was moved to its present prominent position when the lane was widened in 1984. Puddingstone is one form of what is generally called 'sarsen'. Laid down some 50 million years ago, when this region had a hot tropical climate, as a layer over the chalk known as silcrete, it was broken into blocks by the freeze-thaw action of the Ice Age less than 2 million years ago, and these blocks were then carried into the valleys by the torrent of melt-water. Most of the setts surrounding the Puddingstone are of a finer grained sarsen, quarried locally at Denner Hill. Once widely used as paving in the town few of these attractive buff stones survive but some may be seen in their original setting under the Market House."
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 30 Mar 2008
0.06 miles
10
View over Princes Risborough from Whiteleaf Cross
Part of the Ridgeway Path
Image: © Peter Jemmett
Taken: 7 Jul 2007
0.06 miles