The Limbo Connection's photos with the keyword: Springfield House

Knee's Van Passing Springfield House Gates

29 Jun 2014 137
Springfield House on Hilperton Road, Trowbridge, had become dilapidated and was demolished in 1958 to make way for new housing. Only these gates and their piers remain at the town end of Springfield Park. The house was built in the Italianate style circa 1840 by a wealthy woollen manufacturer, William Stancomb, who was Lord of the Manor. He also built Trowbridge Market House, of which only the facade now survives, and serves as the portico for Castle Place shopping centre and a Wetherspoon’s pub. Stancomb later moved to an even grander home at Blount’s Court, Potterne, but his name lives on in a street nearby these gates. The sad fate of Springfield House may yet be repeated for Knees of Trowbridge, whose van is passing the gates in the photograph. Earlier this year (2014) they closed their iconic department store in the centre of town and relocated on a smaller scale to an out-of-town shopping park. Arguably this has had a greater effect on the townspeople than the conspicuous display of the enormous wealth of the late William Stancomb. Sigma 15-30mm F3.5-4.5 EX DG Aspherical DF lens on a Nikon D90.

Springfield House Gates

26 Jun 2014 151
Springfield House Gates in Hilperton Road, Trowbridge. Springfield House was demolished in 1958 to make way for housing development. Only the gate piers at the town end of Springfield Park survive. They are grade II listed lest anybody gets an idea to do away with them too. Springfield House was built around 1840 in the Italianate style favoured by wealthy early Victorians. It was the home of William Stancomb, a prominent clothier, who was part of the flourishing Trowbridge wool business. In 1862 Stancomb also built the Market Hall, where the buses now stop in Trowbridge centre. Only the facade of that building remains as the entrance to the Wetherspoons pub named Sir Isaac Pitman in honour of the Trowbridgian inventor of Pitman shorthand. Stancomb’s name lives on in Stancomb Avenue, a nearby residential street.

Springfield House Gates

05 Jun 2014 140
A detail of Springfield House Gates in Hilperton Road, Trowbridge. Springfield House was demolished in 1958 to make way for housing development. Only the gate piers at the town end of Springfield Park survive. They are grade II listed lest anybody gets an idea to do away with them too. Springfield House was built around 1840 in the Italianate style favoured by wealthy early Victorians. It was the home of William Stancomb, a prominent clothier, who was part of the flourishing Trowbridge wool business. In 1862 Stancomb also built the Market Hall, where the buses now stop in Trowbridge centre. Only the facade of that building remains as the entrance to the Wetherspoons pub named Sir Isaac Pitman in honour of the Trowbridgian inventor of Pitman shorthand. Stancomb’s name lives on in Stancomb Avenue, a nearby residential street. Photographed with a Nikon D90 and Sigma 15-30mm EX IF lens.