IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
High Elm Road, ALTRINCHAM, WA15 0HU

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to High Elm Road, WA15 0HU by members of the Geograph project.

The Geograph project started in 2005 with the aim of publishing, organising and preserving representative images for every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland and the Isle of Man.

There are currently over 7.5m images from over14,400 individuals and you can help contribute to the project by visiting https://www.geograph.org.uk

Image Map


Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Notes
  • Clicking on the map will re-center to the selected point.
  • The higher the marker number, the further away the image location is from the centre of the postcode.

Image Listing (60 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
High Elm Road at Longsides Road
Image: © Colin Pyle Taken: 20 Jun 2014
0.07 miles
2
Ravenwood Drive, Hale Barns
Farmland in the 1950s but now part of an extensive estate. A November day but as warm and sunny as early September!
Image: © Anthony O'Neil Taken: 9 Nov 2013
0.09 miles
3
Public footpath - no cycling
Joins Ravenwood Drive to Winmarith Drive but is just part of an old right-of-way used by people walking from Brooks Drive, or Hale Road, to Chapel Lane, across intervening farmland. There were still crops of oats and barley here in the 1950s and considerable excitement amongst local children when the big combine harvesters were at work. Expansion of housing estates around Hale Barns, and the growth of Ringway airport, saw the end of large scale farming in the vicinity.
Image: © Anthony O'Neil Taken: 9 Nov 2013
0.09 miles
4
Enclosed footpath from Winmarith Drive
It seems unlikely that the current residents here realise that this path is all that remains of the right-of-way, across open farmland, from Hale Road to Warburton Green. The 1950s building boom in Hale Barns obliterated most of the meadows, copses and fields that surrounded it before the War. There is a (1954) watercolour sketch of the meadow - belonging to Prospect House - which once bordered the brown fence (formerly iron railings) to the right of the photo. Just beyond these railings was a stand of massive beech trees, with a rookery. The meadow was ankle deep in daisies, buttercups, clover and rough grass. Several ponies grazed there, and the nearby pond attracted dragonflies in the summer months. What a change!
Image: © Anthony O'Neil Taken: 9 Nov 2013
0.11 miles
5
Unexpected history
The owners of these houses and gardens in Winmarith Drive may not know that it was once the site of two conjoined ponds, located between the weeping willow and the boundary of Prospect Drive, beyond. These were about 2 metres deep and roughly 70 metres by 10 metres in surface area. They can be seen on 1940s plans of Hale Barns. A buried culvert pipe - fed by run-off from adjacent fields - kept them topped up, the water being unable to escape the underlying clay. One presumes the developers laid a concrete raft over the drained land before constructing the housing foundations. Perhaps the 'spring' is still there but diverted into the main sewers.
Image: © Anthony O'Neil Taken: 9 Nov 2013
0.13 miles
6
The end of Winmarith Drive, Hale Barns
Beyond these houses is Prospect Drive, completed in 1955 and then the latest encroachment of private building into the area. Before Winmarith was developed, residents on the eastern side of Prospect Drive had a clear view across country to Alderley Edge. At the end of the 50s, the owner of Prospect House disposed of the paddock and five acres of rough meadow adjacent to its gardens. This became the estate we see today. All that remains visible of an earlier era is a nearby, enclosed footpath - the remnant of a right-of-way over open fields to Warburton Green. Where the left hand bungalow now stands, was a figure-of-eight-shaped pond, fed by water draining from surrounding farm land. (This is shown on the 1940 O.S. map). The pond was home to mallards, water hens and an occasional heron. After heavy rain, it overflowed into low gardens at Prospect Drive, forming a temporary mini-lake. One wonders if the present residents realise their homes sit on a former marsh!
Image: © Anthony O'Neil Taken: 9 Nov 2013
0.13 miles
7
The morning after the night before - Hale Barns, Cheshire
No one expected to awake to this. The garden table registered six inches of virgin snow overnight.
Image: © Anthony O'Neil Taken: 5 Jan 2010
0.13 miles
8
Prospect Drive, Hale Barns
Image: © Anthony O'Neil Taken: Unknown
0.14 miles
9
Near the end of Winmarith Drive
Image: © Anthony O'Neil Taken: 9 Nov 2013
0.14 miles
10
Prospect Drive, Hale Barns
Image: © Anthony O'Neil Taken: Unknown
0.14 miles
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