Description of 4-B Tenter Hill
1. The first two cottages after the White Horse in the early 1990s
2. Carlton House and Carlton Cottage, probably photographed in the 1990s, together with an architectural description giving their date of origin as late 18th century
3. Undated black and white photo of Mrs. Brooksbank standing outside her cottage. The attached farther cottages were demolished during the Second World War
4. The same cottage as item 3 photographed about 2000
5. Tenter Hill House at the top of the cul de sac on the left together with the nearby cottages and a contemporary photo (year 2000) of the new High Carlton, almost finished half way up the hill on the right hand side
6. Two press photos of Tenter Hill comparing its appearance in 1913 with a shot taken in the late 20th century
7. Photos of the White Horse in 2000
8. Photos of the part demolished butcher's shop at the bottom of Tenter Hill and the cottage that replaced it in 1994
9. A view of the top of Tenter Hill when it was still part of the road to Thorner before the new A1 bypass blocked it in the 1990s
10. A view of the village in the early 1990s taken from the bridge carrying the A1 over Tenter Hill. Also a black and white photo of Mrs Thompson taken in the field when the A1 was still passing through the centre of the village. In the background are the backs of the six small cottages shown in item 2
11. Two photos of Tenter Hill in the early 20th century
12. Taken from the bottom of the hill about 1913, the house on the right was known as Tenter Hill Lodge and the house on the left was The Grange, later converted by Bramham Park Estate into three houses
13. This photo shows Tenter Hill as the cul-de-sac it became on completion of the second A1 bypass constructed in the 1990s
14. The bridge created for the first A1 bypass being demolished to turn Tenter Hill into a cul-de-sac as shown in item 13
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