8 thoughts on “Hartington Road, Stockton

  1. hello peter braney how are you? my name is dean, i spoke to you years ago, i was long time friend of peter . over 22 years day in day out, i do miss him

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    • My mother’s family resided in Hartington Road, when it was the street to live in. Not able to quote a year or period. It was the street where the influential and important people of the town lived.

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  2. My Granny born 1909 in a house in Westcott Street,and later lived in Lightfoot Grove told me as a girl she used to daydream that one day her family could live down Hartington Road as it was such a classy well to do area.

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  3. It was considered a class road in the War along with Richmond Road. I lived in Tarring Street next to St. Bernard’s Road, then Webster Street, then Lawson Street etc… The secretary of The Baptist Church lived there. One upstairs, west side, has a bay window. Yes, it became a well-known drug area, but I wish that someone had informed me that my friend Peter Faulkes had died, another funeral that house-bound PBB missed!

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    • So very true, Hartington Road was nice, the heart of Stockton was the iron works that that fantastic wide market known and visited from all the world, today dessimated, I returned after a decade away in the south, I was offered a house in Hartington Road, lets just say I would rather have died and gone to heaven, saddens me to be honest what a industry and brilliant town we had. Children today in their 40s do not know of the fantastic history Peter, I wish we could go back into history and stop the clock, before it went past no return đŸ™‚

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  4. It is pretty definitive of how society has changed, especially locally. In Victorian / Edwardian times the middle classes used to love to inhabit prime town center districts just liker Hartington Road / Oxbridge Ave and Durham Road. The big family houses with cellars and rooms for a main were must haves back then.
    These days the middle classes have forsaken the town centers for outlying villages.

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