Historic photography

11 Striking Images from England’s Past

Here we look at 11 historic images from the Historic England Archive.

From gritty Victorian street scenes to busy railway stations, sunlight church alters to miners hard at work, the Historic England archive holds thousands of fascinating moments from England’s past.

These images feature in our book ‘Picturing England: The photographic collections of Historic England‘, which charts the changing appearance of England’s buildings, landscapes and people as well as crucial turning points in the history of photography.

Here are some of our favourite photographs from the archive.

1. The 70-Tram Road, East Pool Mine, Carn Brea, Cornwall, around 1893

A black and white photograph of a group of miners working on a sloped mine.
Photographed by John Charles Burrow. MMM01/01/013.

You can only wonder at the technical skill required to capture this vivid image of work underground.

The miners are chasing the lodes of metal ore along a 30 degree slope, and the resulting clash of angles give the picture a giddy complexity and a real flavour of this testing working environment.

2. The north aisle of Westminster Abbey, London, around 1860

A black and white photograph of stone memorials within an abbey
Photographed by Victor Albert Prout. AL2028/014.

It is extraordinary that just 20 years after the invention of photography, practitioners were producing images of such beauty and technical quality.

Prout’s view is an important record of this part of the Abbey, and also captures a quiet, contemplative mood.

3. St Giles’ Fair, Oxford, 1905

A black and white photograph of a large crowd of people in Edwardian dress with fairground attractions in the background
A large crowd gathered outside the spectacle in St Giles, during the annual fair held at the beginning of September. Photographed by Henry William Taunt. CC49/00539.

This image is a reminder of just how rich in information individual photographs can be.

From the fairground attractions and food stalls to the clothes and expressions of the audience, Taunt’s view is an invitation to sink ever deeper into the remarkable detail.

4. Serpentine wall and sign at the Prospect Inn, Minster, Thanet, Kent, 1938

A black and white photograph of a curved stone wall with a tall sign on top saying 'Prospect Inn'.
Photographed by Millar and Harris. CC014611.

Sometimes a professional photographer must have really enjoyed a commission, and we suspect that this is one of those occasions.

The curved wall, its shadow and the Inn sign capture something of the forward-looking, optimistic side of 1930s life without even showing the roadhouse which was the subject of the commission.

5. The junction of Steep Street and Trenchard Street, Bristol, 1866

A black and white photograph of the corner of a steep street with dilapidated terraced buildings
Photographed by John Hill Morgan. OP08887.

This platinum print is a lovely object in its own right, with the subtle tones of the photographic process adding to the air of picturesque dilapidation.

However, it is the small nugget of grittier Victorian reality buried in the image that makes it extra special. The shop window in the centre of the picture contains a sign reading “hair bought”: presumably one of the options for the poor of Bristol in hard times.

6. No 1 Dix’s Field, Exeter, Devon, 1942

A black and white photograph of a three storey traditional building on the corner of a residential road
Photographed by Margaret Tomlinson. BB42/00611.
A black and white photograph of a bomb-damaged residential road
Photographed by Margaret Tomlinson. BB42/00718.

Tomlinson was one of the photographers employed by the National Buildings Record, following its creation in 1941, as a visual record of the nation’s architectural heritage.

These two images of an Exeter House before and after a Baedeker raid in 1942, show just why the Record was necessary. They also stand for me as an emblem of how much was achieved against a background of wartime shortages and dangers.

7. Liverpool Street Station, City of London, 1960 to 1972

A black and white photograph of the tall metal structure of a railway station roof
Photographed by John Gay. AA061618.

John Gay was a pre-war German exile who forged a career as a professional photographer in the decades after 1945.

Gay’s feeling for form and place found perfect expression in industrial and transport architecture, as here at Liverpool Street.

As with his fellow photographer Eric de Mare, Gay’s work provided an eloquent visual argument for the beauty and significance of buildings which were at that time badly under-valued.

8. Courtroom, Royal Courts of Justice, Westminster, 1999

A photograph of the interior of a court room
Photographed by Derek Kendall. BB99/09237.

The in-house photographers of Historic England are heirs to a long tradition of skilled and careful recording.

At its best, as here, their work captures architectural form and decorative detail – but also something of the lived history of the buildings which are our shared inheritance.

9. The Fauld crater, Hanbury, Staffordshire, 1944

A black and white photograph of a crater.
Photographed by the Royal Air Force. RAF_106G_LA_69_PO_0018.

This astonishing view shows the aftermath of the largest ever explosion on British soil. An underground munitions store exploded on 27 November 1944 and killed about 70 people, including local workers as well as staff at the store.

The crater still exists, but its drama is softened by time and vegetation. This image stands as evidence of the raw violence inflicted by war on a quiet corner of the Midlands.

10. St Paul’s Cathedral, City of London, 1948

A black and white photograph of an aerial view of London, showing the dome of St Paul's Cathedral
Photographed by the Royal Air Force. RAF_58_40_VP1_5069.

Like a companion piece to the famous photo of the dome of St Paul’s rising above the fire and smoke of the Blitz, this post-war image is witness to the survival of the Cathedral – but also to the dreadful damage inflicted on the City of London by wartime bombing.

11. Grimethorpe Colliery, South Yorkshire, 1993

A black and white photograph of an aerial scene of Grimethorpe, showing power plants with smoke rising into the air
Photographed by Keith Buck. NMR_12351_25.

Sometimes only an aerial photograph can capture the scale and dominance of an industrial complex.

This view of Grimethorpe was taken shortly before the final closure of the colliery, and the subsequent clearance of the site gives the image a poignant value as a record of a vanished industry.


Picturing England was an exhibition held in 2016 featuring photographs from the Historic England Archive, an unparalleled collection of 9 million images on England’s buildings and landscapes from the 1850s to the present. Viewed collectively, its photographic collections record the changing face of England from the beginning of photography to the present day.


Further reading

6 comments on “11 Striking Images from England’s Past

  1. Reblogged this on historicaltoursireland and commented:
    11 Striking Images from England’s Past
    Choosing 300 images for Picturing England, a new book featuring photographs from our Archive, was both a joy and a torment. It was a joy because my colleagues in the Archive unearthed so many fascinating and unfamiliar pictures from our holdings and a torment because we had to leave out so many wonderful photographs.

  2. Reblogged this on Sleepy Book Dragon and commented:
    Beautiful pictures here. Maybe one or two picture prompts too?

  3. DragonsBreath

    Larger size pic of Step St here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/brizzlebornandbred/2033007605

  4. Reblogged this on Stories of then and commented:
    As a writer, I know that a thousand words are sooo important. But, even I have to admit, that sometimes a picture can tell a thousand words.

  5. Lord Andrew Clinterty

    they should not have closed that mine.

  6. Lady Spencer

    I can see why some of them where chosen. I like number 5 the best and if they are all you printed in your book, then you really have left a lot out that could have gone into a larger book!

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