Postcards and artefacts depicting Swindon's past set to sell for hundreds at auction
Dating from the late 1800s to the early 1900s, the postcards have been described as a "window" into what life was like for Wiltshire residents.
The collection includes over 1,000 postcards, many of which show never-before-seen images, and is expected to sell for a minimum of £200.
Photos show images of the Swindon Tram Car Disaster of 1906, Salisbury Rail Crash of 1906 and of Boer War soldiers, as well as Swindon's GWR works and some of Wiltshire's oldest and now-demolished stations.
For Swindon locals, recognisable roads such as Bath Road, Fleet Street and Station Road in Purton can all be seen, among others.
The postcards record key historical events through the eyes of the town (Image: RWB Auctions)
(Image: RWB Auctions)
"Wiltshire has a rich history and we are very proud of that at RWB Auctions," said Gareth Wasp, head auctioneer at the local auction house which will hold the sale.
"We have already had interest from local buyers in these lots, and we're expecting an exciting atmosphere in the sale room when these items go under the hammer."
Other historic items also set to go under the hammer include a water colour painting of The Vale Hotel in Cricklade, dated 1968, a collection of old historic maps of Wiltshire, and local history books.
Recommended reading:
New mural design for Fleming Way project revealed
Concern at plan for more homes as huge development already looms
Woman walking through park sexually assaulted by hoodie-wearing stranger
One oil portrait, which depicts Edmund Pleydell, the former MP for Wootton Bassett from 1710 to 1715, is expected to sell for between £200 and £400.
Back then, there was no 'royal' title in Royal Wootton Bassett, as the constituency was actually known as a 'rotten borough'.
Edmund Pleydell, former MP of Wootton Bassett (Image: RWB Auctions) Rotten boroughs were parliamentary constituencies with a very small electorate that could be easily controlled or bribed, allowing a candidate to buy their way into Parliament.
The Wootton Bassett constituency was abolished in 1832. Pleydell had married, by 1683, Anne, the daughter and heiress of Sir John Morton, 2nd Baronet and left three sons and three daughters. He divided his estates between his sons. All of these historic items and more will go under the hammer at RWB Auctions on Royal Wootton Bassett High Street from 10am on June 4, and residents are invited to come along and place a bid.
Bids can also be placed online.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
20-06-2025
- Yahoo
That Terrifying Chant in '28 Years Later': Danny Boyle Explains How a 110-Year-Old Recording Came to Define the Film
When the first trailer arrived for '28 Years Later,' the third installment in Danny Boyle and Alex Garland's masterful '28 Days Later' series of horror films, it was scary, filled with gruesome images of zombies and a dystopian world. But what makes the trailer even more terrifying is an eerie, rhythmic chant by a high, nasal voice, moving with a military cadence, monotonal at first but growing increasingly louder and more agitated as it goes on, with the images and ominous musical backdrop growing in speed and intensity as it progresses. More from Variety Box Office: '28 Years Later' Debuts to $5.8 Million, 'Elio' Flies to $3 Million in Thursday Previews Danny Boyle Says He Could Not Make 'Slumdog Millionaire' Today Due to 'Cultural Appropriation' and 'That's How It Should Be': 'I'd Want a Young Indian Filmmaker to Shoot It' '28 Years Later' Duo Danny Boyle and Alex Garland Break Down That Cliffhanger, the Next Two Movies and the Studio's Reaction to Extreme Gore and Nudity Somehow, in that context, the chant, even though the words seem unrelated to the images, is absolutely horrifying, like a deranged rap song. Its use in the film makes an ominous scene even more ominous. The chant is actually 'Boots,' a poem by Rudyard Kipling, first published in 1903 and intended to convey the maddening monotony of soldiers marching; the direct inspiration was the hundreds of miles British soldiers were forced to march across southern Africa in the Second Boer War around the turn of the last century, according to the Kipling Society. The recording used in the film is nearly as old as the poem itself, voiced in 1915 by actor Taylor Holmes. It is a dramatic reading that starts off militaristic as the initial lines set the scene, but his voice is patently hysterical by the end, even as it follows the lock-step rhythm of the first five syllables: 'I—have—marched—six—weeks in hell and certifyIt—is—not—fire—devils, dark, or anything,But boots—boots—boots—boots—movin' up and down again,And there's no discharge in the war!Try—try—try—try—to think of something differentOh—my—God—keep—me from going lunatic!' Unusually for something featured so prominently in a trailer, the poem plays a very small, although foreboding, role in the film — buttressed with an eerie bass synthesizer, it soundtracks Spike and his father walking to the mainland, which is thick with infected zombies, and presumably conveys that they're marching to war. But out of everything that could have been used to deliver that message, why a 110-year-old recording of a poem that dates back to the peak of the British Empire? Boyle explained in an interview with Variety last week. 'We had all these archives that we wanted to use to suggest the culture that the island was teaching its children,' he says. 'It was very much a regressive thing — they were looking back to a time when England was great. 'It's very much linked to Shakespeare,' he continues. 'For those who know the 'Henry the Fifth' film, there's a very famous speech, the Saint Crispin's Day speech, which is about the noble heroic English beating the French with their bows and arrows. We were searching for a song, for a hymn — for a speech, actually. We did think about using the Crispin's Day speech at one point, but that felt too on the nose. 'And then we watched the trailer — Alex and I remember it vividly — the first trailer that Sony sent us, and there was this [recording] on it, and we were like, 'Fucking hell!' It was startling in its power. It was used very effectively. 'The trailer is a very good trailer, but there was something more than that about that [recording], about that tune, about that poem. And we tried it in our archive sequence, and it was like it was made for. it' A rep for Sony wasn't immediately able to pinpoint the person who chose the chant for that trailer, but it was so effective that Boyle was quick to incorporate it into the film. 'It's like a reverse osmosis,' he says. 'It came into the film and seemed to make sense of so much of what we've been trying to reach for.' He also notes that Kipling's words and Holmes' voice, echoing across the decades in a context neither ever could have imagined, somehow take on a new power in today's context. 'You have to hold your hand up and say, 'How is it that something that's recorded over 100 years ago has that same visceral power that it's always intended to have?' And I think it was always intended to have that power and it still maintains it. In a TikTok world, it still has that impact. It's amazing.' Additional reporting by Bill Earl. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? 25 Hollywood Legends Who Deserve an Honorary Oscar
Yahoo
12-06-2025
- Yahoo
Roads to close and trains disrupted ahead of Robbie Williams gig
A number of roads are set to close and train travel disrupted as Robbie Williams takes the stage in Bath this weekend. The former Take That members' tour heads to the Royal Crescent stage this Friday 13 and Saturday 14 June, before dates across Europe in Ireland, France, Spain, Germany, Italy, and Sweden. Gates are set to open at 4pm, with support act Lottery Winners' set starting at 7pm. Robbie is due to take to the stage from 8.30pm, with the concert ending at 10.20pm and a curfew at 10.30pm. A number of road closures will be in place in Bath from the early hours of Friday morning: Marlborough Buildings jct Weston Road Marlborough Buildings jct Cow Lane The Royal Crescent jct Brook Street Royal Avenue jct Marlborough Lane Marlborough Lane jct Upper Bristol Road Royal Avenue jct Queens Parade Royal Victoria Park Drive Charlotte Street Bath is one of the leading tourist destinations in the UK and trains into the city on Friday and Saturday afternoons are busy. If you can travel earlier, enjoying a little more of the city's unique heritage, you may find that trains are quieter and cheaper. After the concert, you'll want to head straight back to the station. GWR will operate the following services: Friday June 13 Towards Bristol: 10.25pm Bath Spa to Bristol Temple Meads 10.38pm Bath Spa to Bristol Parkway (via Bristol Temple Meads) 11.23pm Bath Spa to Bristol Temple Meads 11.29pm Bath Spa to Exeter St Davids (via Bristol Temple Meads) 11.53pm Bath Spa to Bristol Temple Meads 00.02am Bath Spa to Bristol Temple Meads 01.01am Bath Spa to Bristol Temple Meads Towards Chippenham/Swindon: 10.55pm Bath Spa to London Paddington Towards Westbury: 10.41pm Bath Spa to Frome 11.24pm Bath Spa to Westbury 00.04am Bath Spa to Frome Saturday 14 June Towards Bristol: 10.40pm Bath Spa to Bristol Parkway 10.51pm Bath Spa to Bristol Temple Meads 10.55pm Bath Spa to Bristol Temple Meads 11.20pm Bath Spa to Bristol Temple Meads 11.51pm Bath Spa to Bristol Temple Meads 1.30am Bath Spa to Bristol Temple Meads Towards Swindon: 10.45pm Bath Spa to London Paddington 11.44pm Bath Spa to Swindon Towards Westbury: 10.33pm Bath Spa to Frome 11.24 Bath Spa to Westbury Great Western Railway has said with other major events taking place in the city on Saturday, including Bath University Open Day and Bath Races, those travelling are warned to plan ahead and allow plenty of time for their journeys. Travellers can check their train journeys here
Yahoo
04-06-2025
- Yahoo
Postcards and artefacts depicting Swindon's past set to sell for hundreds at auction
Postcards and artefacts that reveal what life was once like in Swindon and Royal Wootton Bassett are set to sell for hundreds at auction. Dating from the late 1800s to the early 1900s, the postcards have been described as a "window" into what life was like for Wiltshire residents. The collection includes over 1,000 postcards, many of which show never-before-seen images, and is expected to sell for a minimum of £200. Photos show images of the Swindon Tram Car Disaster of 1906, Salisbury Rail Crash of 1906 and of Boer War soldiers, as well as Swindon's GWR works and some of Wiltshire's oldest and now-demolished stations. For Swindon locals, recognisable roads such as Bath Road, Fleet Street and Station Road in Purton can all be seen, among others. The postcards record key historical events through the eyes of the town (Image: RWB Auctions) (Image: RWB Auctions) "Wiltshire has a rich history and we are very proud of that at RWB Auctions," said Gareth Wasp, head auctioneer at the local auction house which will hold the sale. "We have already had interest from local buyers in these lots, and we're expecting an exciting atmosphere in the sale room when these items go under the hammer." Other historic items also set to go under the hammer include a water colour painting of The Vale Hotel in Cricklade, dated 1968, a collection of old historic maps of Wiltshire, and local history books. Recommended reading: New mural design for Fleming Way project revealed Concern at plan for more homes as huge development already looms Woman walking through park sexually assaulted by hoodie-wearing stranger One oil portrait, which depicts Edmund Pleydell, the former MP for Wootton Bassett from 1710 to 1715, is expected to sell for between £200 and £400. Back then, there was no 'royal' title in Royal Wootton Bassett, as the constituency was actually known as a 'rotten borough'. Edmund Pleydell, former MP of Wootton Bassett (Image: RWB Auctions) Rotten boroughs were parliamentary constituencies with a very small electorate that could be easily controlled or bribed, allowing a candidate to buy their way into Parliament. The Wootton Bassett constituency was abolished in 1832. Pleydell had married, by 1683, Anne, the daughter and heiress of Sir John Morton, 2nd Baronet and left three sons and three daughters. He divided his estates between his sons. All of these historic items and more will go under the hammer at RWB Auctions on Royal Wootton Bassett High Street from 10am on June 4, and residents are invited to come along and place a bid. Bids can also be placed online.