1
Ordnance Survey Cut Mark
This OS cut mark can be found on No17B Clifford Street. It marks a point 63.633m above mean sea level.
Image: © Adrian Dust
Taken: 4 Jul 2023
0.03 miles
2
OS benchmark - Shrewsbury, 17B Clifford Street
An OS cutmark in the wall on the south side of the passageway which runs between Clifford St and Monkmoor Road, which was last levelled by the OS in 1951 at 63.633m above Ordnance Datum Newlyn. It appears on the 1901 map at 207.5ft Liverpool Datum.
Image: © Richard Law
Taken: 27 Aug 2023
0.03 miles
3
OS benchmark - Shrewsbury, 1 Sunnyfields
An OS cutmark on the wall of no 1 Sunnyfields, which was last levelled in 1967 at 63.478m above Ordnance Datum Newlyn. It also appears on the 1901 map at 208.5ft Liverpool datum.
Image: © Richard Law
Taken: 27 Aug 2023
0.08 miles
4
Bage Way - Dark Lane footbridge
Image: © Peter Whatley
Taken: 23 Mar 2012
0.08 miles
5
Ordnance Survey Cut Mark
This OS cut mark can be found on No1 Sunnyfields. It marks a point 63.478m above mean sea level.
Image: © Adrian Dust
Taken: 4 Jul 2023
0.09 miles
6
Jobcentre Plus entrance road, Shrewsbury Whitehall
From Monkmoor Road.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 31 May 2014
0.10 miles
7
Whitehall Mansions, Shrewsbury
Set back from Monkmoor Road, Whitehall Mansions is a sandstone former mansion converted to flats.
Image: © Jaggery
Taken: 31 May 2014
0.10 miles
8
House in Abbey Foregate
Lies opposite The Old Bush public house
Image: © John Firth
Taken: 13 Oct 2010
0.11 miles
9
Whitehall, Monkmoor Road, Shrewsbury
Rather resembling a Victorian fantasy, it is in fact a house of 1578-82, when it was built for a lawyer, Richard Prince. Its red sandstone is supposedly reused from the Abbey. A gabled gatehouse stands between the house and street. Grade II* listed.
A window at top right was boarded up, but the building appears to have been converted to flats.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 12 May 2014
0.11 miles
10
Whitehall, Monkmoor, Shrewsbury
So named because it was, in the 18th century, whitewashed / limewashed but now the Old Red Sandstone is revealed once again. An Elizabethan mansion built for a Shrewsbury lawyer called Richard Prynce and dates from around 1570. Now surrounded by the expansion of Shrewsbury and I believe converted into upmarket apartments.
Image: © Jeremy Bolwell
Taken: 4 May 2012
0.11 miles