The Victorian Suburb
That is because, opposite the stop, you will find the former orphanage developed by legendary Christian and Philanthropic George Muller.
His work was huge amongst the poor and deprived of Bristol.
Whilst the idea of massive orphanage buildings is no longer the modern way, the building still stands.
As you would expect from that far off age, the children were segregated, wore uniform and were highly disciplined.
But now you walk forward in the direction of the bus and you will soon spot a right hand turn …
Turn here and you would be walking down Station Road, which, surprise surprise, led to a railway station. But it was not called Ashley Down. Until 1964 you would find Ashley Hill station.
Of course, the building of this station contributed enormously to the development of its surrounding suburbs as it provided a quick ride into Bristol.
The concept of “Express GWR Station” might have been a bit optimistic, but (above right) it did have a “Station Hotel”.
The building is still there but now divided into flats.
It stood at the bottom of Lilstock Avenue.
In the above shot, the Station Hotel etc is off shot to the right and the fence (top right) is on the edge of the cul-de-sac end of Station Road.
There’s still a fence there but undergrowth precludes a view of the line.
And below are some of the girls from the orphanage awaiting a train to take them on an exciting excursion, perhaps to Weston-super-Mud, changing at Bristol Temple Meads.
Hmmm? Maybe not ideal beach wear, but perhaps they had their voluminous cozzies in their bags.
Tomorrow, fbb aims to put Ashley Hill station into its railway context.
With their fellowship meetings coming up in a week, here is part one of the quiz pages. The leaflet takes a glance at the somewhat obscure clean and unclean designation of the various animals as outlined in the Old Testament. The rules may seem obscure, but in the context of, say, 1200BC, they were a remarkably prescient guide to healthy eating.
13 more tomorrow.
Above are the platforms on the flyover at Bletchley. These platforms will open when the Oxford to Bedford via Bletchley service starts. The bus that accompanied the puzzle Picture was a United Counties VR terminating at Stony Stratford, a small town on the A5 which was originally far more important than the obscure village of Bletchley