Church Street is a pleasant secluded lane running southwards from Greys Road to Vicarage Road, past the 19th-century church of Holy Trinity which g
BELL STREET is one of Henley's four main central streets, running southwards from Northfield End on the town's outskirts to the central crossroads
Image: Norman Avenue, developed by the Henley builder Charles Clements from c.1885.
Henley-on-Thames: Town, Trade and River
Most buildings on Hart Street have brick frontages dating from the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries.
First recorded as Le Herte in 1428-9, the White Hart was Henley's oldest functioning inn until its closure in 1996.
The Chantry House is a high-status, late medieval timber-framed building on the east side of Henley churchyard, north of the the church.
The buildings along Burford's main streets reflect the town's varied social character, which included gentry and professionals as well as shopkeepe
These now separate buildings were formerly the White Hart Inn, said to have been built and opened around 1615 by Richard Merywether. No.
In contrast to the houses further east, buildings from here to the end of Sheep Street resulted from 16th- and 17th-century development of what was