1
Colneis Road, Felixstowe
Image: © Adrian S Pye
Taken: 21 Sep 2014
0.07 miles
2
Bungalows on Colneis Road, Felixstowe
Image: © Christopher Hilton
Taken: 19 Oct 2022
0.12 miles
3
Old Felixstowe village hall
Image: © Oxymoron
Taken: 29 May 2009
0.18 miles
4
Old Felixstowe village sign
Village sign of Old Felixstowe Suffolk.
Image: © Keith Evans
Taken: 21 Nov 2006
0.21 miles
5
Inside Old Felixstowe church
Looking across the transept with the chancel on the right.
Image: © Andrew Hill
Taken: 14 Aug 2009
0.22 miles
6
Parish Church of St Peter and St Paul, Felixstowe
The parish church of St.Peter and St Paul Old Felixstowe Suffolk. http://www.suffolkchurches.co.uk/felixpp.html
Image: © Keith Evans
Taken: 21 Nov 2006
0.22 miles
7
Church of St Peter and St Paul, Old Felixstowe
An interesting church located in a suburban area. The lower section of the original tower can be seen on the left. The enlarged chancel and addition of transepts date from the 1870's.
Image: © Andrew Hill
Taken: 14 Aug 2009
0.23 miles
8
Municipal pride on gravestone, churchyard of St Peter and St Paul, Old Felixstowe
Three people are commemorated on this gravestone, but it is the middle one about whom there is most text and the others are defined purely in relation to him. It commemorates Susanah J. S. Hamshire, died 1896 aged 75 years; then, below a sepia photograph of the man, her only son William Gardiner Clarke (1864-1945) and his wife Annie Fitzjohn Clarke, died 1971. William Gardiner Clarke's inscription takes up most space and notes him to have been a member of Felixstowe Urban District Council for 50 years: "Well done, thou good & faithful servant."
Image: © Christopher Hilton
Taken: 6 May 2023
0.23 miles
9
Stained glass, Old Felixstowe Church
Attractive depictions of St Felix and King Sigebert.
Image: © Andrew Hill
Taken: 14 Aug 2009
0.23 miles
10
Felixstowe St Peter and St Paul?s church
As you enter through the 1914 lych gate the church seems a hotchpotch of buildings. Nothing seems in its proper place, and it isn’t until you enter the church that everything seems to make sense. The restoration in the 19th c. was responsible, for it included building north and south transepts which do not sit easily externally. The high peaked timber-lined roofs meet at the crossing and are supported there by great ogee arches.
Image: © Adrian S Pye
Taken: 5 Nov 2007
0.23 miles