Saltfleet, Sea Lane c.1955
Photo ref: S479021
Made in Britain logo

More about this scene

The lane just stops here, but not at the sea –beyond is an RAF bombing range. There are danger signs and red flags all over the place. Caravans are now in all the spare spaces, and the wooden huts (right) have been replaced by a modern brick building. The house on the left is in the process of being altered (2004), and the lean-to has already gone.

An extract from Lincolnshire Living Memories.

Buy a Print

Unframed, Mounted, Framed and Canvas prints in a range of sizes and styles.

View Sizes & Prices

Featuring this image:

Lincolnshire Living Memories

Lincolnshire Living Memories

The photo 'Saltfleet, Sea Lane c1955' appears in this book.

View Book

Memories of Saltfleet, Sea Lane c1955

For many years now, we've been inviting visitors to our website to add their own memories to share their experiences of life as it was, prompted by the photographs in our archive. These memories are of Saltfleet, Sea Lane c.1955

Sparked a Memory for you?

If this has sparked a memory, why not share it here?

My first visit to Saltfleet was as a 12 year old in 1956. A relative , Kitty Scherdel was managing the Sunnydale site for local farmer George Tuxworth and had recently moved a converted bus there from South Yorkshire and we stayed in that. There was one other converted bus and 3 caravans on the site and a chicken hut.. The old lookout tower om the beach was still in good condition then, and the tide ...see more
I spent many happy years at Kingswood Caravan Site (now Tuxworth Holiday Park). My nanna & granddad (Henry "Sailor" & Nellie Toyne) started using the site in the 1960's until the 1990's, althrough my granddad died in 1988, my nanna continued until her mobility let her down. Facilities at Kingswood would have been considered "primitive" today. No electricity, other than the ...see more
My father was Rev R G Cowie, who was before Rev Reece Jones. We came to North Somercotes in 1939 from Newcastle and I had an idyllic childhood in the vicarage. I remember a bomb fell in South Somercotes, I also remember picking up silver foil from the lawn in the mornings. Tank traps on the beaches.I too, remember the Clayton brothers who delivered coal, and I think a Mr Stones who was a farmer. There ...see more
Following on from my cousin Mick Packwood's memories of Saltfleet in the 1970s, I would like to add mine. Life there was pretty simple as I guess most places were during that period. Fishing was the main pastime during the day with the usual catch being eels. We did used to eat them once you managed to actually hold them and skin them. Grandad used to stew them in milk, but to be honest the only way I ...see more