IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
Wells Road, MALVERN, WR14 4RH

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to Wells Road, WR14 4RH 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

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MarkerMarker

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Notes
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  • The higher the marker number, the further away the image location is from the centre of the postcode.

Image Listing (1560 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Gully plaque on the Tudor Hotel
The plaque was placed on the Tudor Hotel in 1992 by the Malvern Civic Society to celebrate 150 years of the Malvern "Water Cure". It reads: Dr James Mamby Gully practised the Malvern Water Cure here 1842-1872
Image: © Bob Embleton Taken: 2 Aug 2009
0.00 miles
2
The Tudor Hotel
This building was used by one of the Water Cure doctors, Dr James Mamby Gully who treated Tennyson, Florence Nightingale and Darwin. Here it is viewed from Abbey Road, close to his colleague, Dr Wilson's, water cure establishment.
Image: © Bob Embleton Taken: 25 Aug 2010
0.00 miles
3
Malvern's 'Bridge of Sighs'
This bridge connected the two houses in which Dr Gully provided the 'water cure' in the 19th century. Male patients in one house and female in the other. Locally this bridge is known as the'Bridge of Signs'. Currently the building on the left is undergoing restoration, hence the scaffolding.
Image: © Philip Halling Taken: 11 May 2021
0.00 miles
4
The Tudor
Newbie House is a Grade II listed building designed in 1852 by Samuel Sanders Teulon in the mock Tudor/Elizabethan style for water cure specialist, Dr James Mamby Gully. In the 1930s the building was converted from the water cure hospital into a hotel and is now undergoing development as luxury apartments. The name Tudor Hotel is being erased from the side wall - just the top of the second word can be seen. http://www.tudorcourt.net/styled-4/
Image: © Bob Embleton Taken: 23 Mar 2012
0.00 miles
5
The Tudor Hotel
This red-brick building on Wells Road in Great Malvern was formerly the water cure establishment of Dr Gully in the mid-19th century.
Image: © Philip Halling Taken: 23 Mar 2020
0.00 miles
6
Rooftop of former Tudor Hotel
This red-brick building on Wells Road in Great Malvern was formerly the water cure establishment of Dr Gully in the mid-19th century.
Image: © Philip Halling Taken: 23 Mar 2020
0.00 miles
7
The Tudor Hotel, Wells Road
Quite an old building in Malvern. Used as a Water Cure Establishment in Victorian times with distinguished patients including Charles Darwin and Florence Nightingale. It is now in a rather dilapidated state.
Image: © Bob Embleton Taken: 2 Aug 2009
0.01 miles
8
Malvern's Bridge of Sighs
This bridge links two buildings which used to offer the Water Cure under Dr James Manby Gully. The house on the left was Newbie House and Holyrood House on the right. The bridge is known locally as the 'Bridge of Sighs'.
Image: © Philip Halling Taken: 23 May 2021
0.01 miles
9
The Tudor Hotel
One of the pioneers of the "Water Cure", Dr James Manby Gully took over the Tudor Hotel and Hornyold House as his establishment. Looking along the Wells Road into Great Malvern town centre.
Image: © Bob Embleton Taken: 28 Jul 2007
0.01 miles
10
Rosebank Gardens and the Tudor Hotel
Rosebank house was owned by Dyson Perrins (of Worcestershire Sauce fame). He gave the house and gardens to the Urban District Council who eventually demolished the old house in the early 1950s. The public gardens are now a beautiful oasis of green and flowers spoilt only by its proximity to the A449 Wells Road. The Tudor Hotel was used by Dr Gully from the 1840s as his Water Cure establishment. Although a popular hotel with a busy public bar in the 1970s (we nearly held our wedding reception there in 1976) it became a B&B for homeless people and has now been empty for some years with a suspicious fire a year back. It is a listed building and deserves better protection.
Image: © Bob Embleton Taken: 2 May 2011
0.01 miles
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