1
Play area
Image: © Alex McGregor
Taken: 31 Jul 2014
0.06 miles
2
Park
Image: © Alex McGregor
Taken: 31 Jul 2014
0.08 miles
3
Stoke church viewed from near the town hall.
The trees help to contrast the old and the new.
Image: © www fotodiscs4u co uk
Taken: 6 Jun 2006
0.12 miles
4
Advert at bottom of Hartshill Road, Stoke
Shops on Hartshill Road - the junction with Geen Street just visible at the right.
Advert reads: Hercules The modern cycle
Image: © Steven Birks
Taken: Unknown
0.17 miles
5
Site of the Domesday Village of Pinchetel, Penkhull
The stone reads :-
This stone marks the entrance to the former
Iron Age Fort and the Domesday Village
of
Pinchetel
a Royal Manor from 1086
to the time of Edward II
The hill-top village of Penkhull was probably the earliest inhabited place within the area now known as the Potteries, being settled by the Celts, Romans and Anglo-Saxons in turn. It was ideally situated by reason of its wooded hunting grounds, its clear views over the surrounding countryside and its closeness to the streams in the Lyme Valley on the western, and the Trent Valley on the eastern side.
The village may have been protected by a primitive hill-fort, although no remains of such a construction have been discovered. In 1086, the Domesday Book described the Manor of Penkhull (which it called "Pinchetel") as a village of great size, with over 1,000 acres of arable land stretched out over parts of present-day Newcastle-under-Lyme, Hanley, Shelton, Stoke and Boothen.
However, soon after this survey was taken, Penkhull began to decline in importance with the building of a New Castle nearby. A market town quickly grew up within sight of this castle and by the year 1173, the Borough of Newcastle-under-Lyme ("New Castle under the Elm Trees") had been established. This borough was to remain the largest centre of population and leading market town in the area for the next 600 years until the rise of the six towns now called Stoke-on-Trent.
Domesday Listed as :-
PENKHULL. Earl Algar held it. 2 hides, with its dependencies.
Land for 11 ploughs. In lordship 2;
17 villagers and 6 smallholders with 8 ploughs.
Meadow, 2 acres; woodland 1 league long and 2 furlongs wide. Value £6.
Image: © Brian Deegan
Taken: 12 Jul 2020
0.18 miles
6
Roman Catholic Church, Stoke
Dedicated to Our Lady of the Angels and St Peter In Chains
Image: © Geoff Pick
Taken: 24 Jan 2009
0.19 miles
7
Bus stop on Hartshill Road
Looking west.
Image: © JThomas
Taken: 11 Jun 2016
0.19 miles
8
Stoke Bottom Lock
This is the lowest lock of a flight of five on the Trent and Mersey Canal in Stoke. I believe it was rebuilt here in the 1960s when the original line of the canal was moved to accommodate the new road system in the city. This lock has been fabricated out of concrete as opposed to the original which would have been made out of brick/stone.
Image: © Andy Beecroft
Taken: 10 Aug 2004
0.19 miles
9
Shelton Old Road, Stoke-on-Trent
Image: © Alex McGregor
Taken: 5 May 2011
0.19 miles
10
Stoke-upon-Trent: Floyd Street / Hall Street
This street bears two street name signs one above another high on the wall of the building on the left. The older states 'Hall Street', the newer 'Floyd Street'.
Image: © Jonathan Hutchins
Taken: 10 Dec 2015
0.21 miles