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1. View of the River Derwent and South Parade,
taken from the top of Holme Road in September 2008.
Gulliver's Kingdom is just seen through the trees. A little
of Temple Walk is in the picture, notably the houses before you reach
the Temple Hotel from the main road. One Temple Walk property has housed
the same family for over 200 years. The modern houses on the right
hand corner immediately below the camera were built in the 1950s on
land that had been part of the garden of "Ashfield", originally
called the Villa. The gatepost for the house, with "Ashfield House"
written on it, was still to be found at the road junction of Temple
Walk and Waterloo Road in the 1940s and was probably there until the
police houses were built. A large ash tree grew beside the gatepost[1].

2. Pictures 2 and 3 show the village on a busy summer's
day and were taken about 1998.
This photograph of South Parade (Museum Parade) has been taken from
close to the Fish Pond Hotel, looking northwards towards the Pitchings
and Waterloo Road. The historic Hodgkinson's Hotel[2] is
at the bottom of the Pitchings, on the left hand side. The exterior
has been restored in recent times. To the left of centre, above the
traffic light showing green, you can see Wellington House on Waterloo
Road. Next to it, and slightly higher, is the stone built Belle Vue
House.
To the right and behind the lights is an open space,
but this has been built on since this picture was taken (see 4 and
5 below).

3. Taken from the bottom of the Pitchings, this second of the 1998
photographs looks southwards along the South Parade. In 1800 the row
of shops was one long building stretching from Hodgkinson's Hotel (shown
in the first photograph), to the end. Where the shops now are were
stables and coach houses, with living accommodation above. Some of
the upstairs rooms show signs of having been part of larger properties;
for example, the ceiling mouldings go into two different rooms, divided
by partition walls. The building with the very large bay window, semi
obscured by the left hand branches of the tree, housed Mawe's very
first Museum[3]. The whole
Parade had been part of the Great Hotel, though the window wasn't there
at the time of the hotel.
The Donegani family lived at Belle Vue House and ran a butcher's shop
on South Parade[4]. The
tiled butchery was on the RHS of the green painted building that is
now the cycle shop. There was a fishmonger on the left, with a shared
central doorway between the two. The butcher's shop later became Hardy
of Wensley (British Butchers) and LCM later took over.

4. About 2000 the area opposite the shops and cafes of South Parade
was redeveloped, to provide a row of shops, a fish and chip restaurant
a small kiosk and the photograph on the left was taken before any of
the shops were occupied. This was where, in the 1950s and 60s, Mr.
W. Smith hired out boats and had his Petrifying Well.

5. This picture shows the back of the shops and
the kiosk.
The road widening of the 1960s and this later redevelopment
has provided views of the river that were, for many years, hidden by
buildings.

6. This is No. 1 North Parade, also shown in picture 2. There was
a four storey building on this site until the 1920s, when the original
building was demolished. Peter Reeds had closed his grocery and the
replacement building, which retained the same roof height, became a
bank.

7. Holiday crowds in South Parade. The motor cyclists are regular visitors
to the village.

8. An equally busy North Parade, also taken in the holiday season.
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