1
Benchmark on wall fronting #27 Mapperley Road
Ordnance Survey cut mark benchmark described on the Bench Mark Database at http://www.bench-marks.org.uk/bm47856
Image: © Roger Templeman
Taken: 1 Apr 2013
0.01 miles
2
#27 Mapperley Road
There is an OS benchmark
Image on a wall stone to the right of the pedestrian gate
Image: © Roger Templeman
Taken: 1 Apr 2013
0.01 miles
3
Fothergill Court
Standing on the site of Watson Fothergill's family home which he built in 1871-2. http://www.watsonfothergill.co.uk/demolish.htm .
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 6 May 2010
0.05 miles
4
Nottingham - NG3
The Robert Wilkinson Smith Homes are situated off Chestnut Grove. When the second Lord Rancliff of Bunny Park Hall died he left his entire estate to his housekeeper, Mrs Burt, who subsequently married a certain Mr Alexander Forteath. At some point after their wedding Mrs. Forteath (formerly Burt) made the decision that following her death the estate should be returned to the descendants of Lord Rancliffe’s family. Notwithstanding this however, this former housekeeper simultaneously arranged for Arabella Hawksley, her niece, to benefit from the entire estate for the remainder of her life. Arabella married a certain Mr Robert Wilkinson Smith, a successful Nottingham lace manufacturer but under previously agreed arrangements, when Mrs Wilkinson Smith (as she had become) died in 1909 the Bunny and Bradmore estates including assets in Costock, East Leake, Keyworth, Ruddington and Wysall were returned to a next in line family member - Sir Richard Levinge, of Knockdrin Castle, Ireland. Not however, before the founders and trustees of Robert Wilkinson Smith Charity funded the building of this small housing complex in 1910 at a cost of £1,310. Robert Wilkinson Smith, who died c.1910, left property (houses) of his own in Lister Gate, Long Row, Clumber Street and South Parade.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 17 Jun 2012
0.06 miles
5
Nottingham - NG3
Who was the Robert Wilkinson Smith who funded the building of these endowed houses off Chestnut Grove? When the second Lord Rancliff of Bunny Park Hall, died he left his entire estate to a certain Mrs Burt, his housekeeper, who subsequently married a Mr Alexander Forteath. At some point after their wedding Mrs. Forteath (formerly Burt) made a decision that following her death the estate should be returned to the descendants of Lord Rancliffe’s family. Simultaneously however, she arranged that her niece, Arabella Hawksley, should enjoy the estates for the duration of her life. It seems that Arabella married a certain Mr Robert Wilkinson Smith late on in her life. Mrs Wilkinson Smith, (as she became) died in 1909 and the Bunny and Bradmore estates, which included Costock, East Leake, Keyworth, Ruddington and Wysall, were left to Sir Richard Levinge, of Knockdrin Castle, Ireland. At some point though Mr Robert Wilkinson Smith (or his wife's estate) funded this small housing complex.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 17 Jun 2012
0.06 miles
6
Nottingham - NG3 (Bellevue)
A school playing field belonging to St Augustine's R/C Primary School is overlooked by a low-rise block of luxury apartments. Mapperley Road at the far end of the football pitch.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 17 Jun 2012
0.06 miles
7
Fine property
This fine house on the corner of Cramner Street and Mapperley Road is now used as offices for the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.
Image: © Michael Dibb
Taken: 31 Mar 2017
0.06 miles
8
Mapperley Road and St Andrew's Church spire
A slightly foreshortened view towards Mansfield Road. St Andrew's Church dates from 1869-71 and is a prominent landmark on the north side of the city.
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 1 Jul 2015
0.07 miles
9
Nottingham - NG3
Chestnut Grove is now a cul-de-sac created by these gates, whereas the drive beyond the gates actually links to Berkeley Avenue. These gates act to secure one of the entrances/exits to Forest House, a property-with-grounds that has served several masters in the past. The domestic-sized house behind the gates may have been a gate lodge and a porter's lodge in the past. The extensive premises themselves (not visible here) were once the home of Thomas Isaac Birkin, of the lace making dynasty. When he became the 1st Baronet of Ruddington Grange and moved to Ruddington he gave the property away for conversion into a Children's Hospital. It functioned as such (with extensions) until the early 1980s when it became the HQ of Nottinghamshire Area Health Authority and later on the base of Nottingham Health Authority.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 17 Jun 2012
0.07 miles
10
Down Elm Avenue
A zoom view towards Cranmer Street and Mansfield Road, with Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station on the hazy skyline, eight miles or so away. "The wise policy of the Corporation in providing these stately avenues of elms and oaks in the midst of the crowded city is self-evident; the only regret is that things are not more so, as we see meadows and gardens rapidly despoiled by the builder in utter neglect of the things which go to make life—especially child-life—healthy and bright" (Illustrated Handbook to Nottingham, 1906).
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 23 Jun 2014
0.07 miles