News

20/09/2018

Send Us Your Old Stonehenge Snaps!

  • Families recreate decades old photos taken at Stonehenge
  • As Stonehenge celebrates 100 years of belonging to the nation, English Heritage asks the public to share their and their ancestors’ Stonehenge photos: the older, the better

Rowland Allen (third from left) and his family at Stonehenge in 1955 – shortly before the great trilithon, seen behind the family group in the newest photo, was re-erected in 1958

This summer English Heritage invited a number of individuals and families to revisit Stonehenge and to recreate photos taken decades ago at the ancient monument. Today, as English Heritage reveals the touching ‘then and now’ results, the guardian of Stonehenge is calling on the public to send in as many Stonehenge snaps as possible for a special digital photo-album, created  to celebrate the centenary of Stonehenge belonging to the nation. 

Several people recently made special trips to Stonehenge, travelling back to the monument and back in time to recreate photos taken in front of the iconic stones during the 1950s, 60s and 70s. Among them was American Taney Roniger who was only three-years-old when she first visited Stonehenge in 1971 with her parents. Her mother photographed Taney with her father (a US army doctor stationed in Belgium) leaning against one of the stones. Almost fifty years later, Taney once against posed in the same spot, only with her husband this time who wore the same woolly jumper as her father did in the original photo.

Rowland Allen (third from left) recreating a family image at Stonehenge taken in 1955

Commenting on both her first and most recent trips to the prehistoric stone circle, Taney Roniger said: “I remember a feeling of vastness at the stones. And also a feeling of peace, not least because America was so troubled at the time because of the Vietnam War. The original is one of my favourite photographs, I really treasure it. Returning to Stonehenge after all those years was really special. The stones were overwhelming, I had the sense that they were bigger even than my first visit, and it felt like my parents were with me.”

Now, English Heritage is calling on the public to share with the charity their photographs of their – or their ancestors’ – visits to Stonehenge from over the years. All the images will be included in a unique digital gallery showcasing trips to the World Heritage Site from 1918 to 2018. To share your, your parents’, your grandparents’ or even your great-grandparents’ photographs of the monument – and to see everyone else’s souvenirs – visit www.stonehenge100.co.uk

Helena Myska remembers stopping at Stonehenge on the way to Cornwall in 1971. She was nine and her sister was four

Kate Davies, English Heritage’s Director of Stonehenge, said: “People have been visiting Stonehenge for centuries and since the nineteenth century, people have felt compelled to take photos of themselves and their loved ones in front of the stones. But rather than lying forgotten in a dusty old photo album or on a memory card, we want people to share with us their photos of Stonehenge and help us to create a photo album with a difference. It could be your photo, it could be your parents’ photo, it could be your grandparents’ photo – we’d love to see it and bring as many of them together as possible. Stonehenge is an important place in many people’s memories, and each and every person who has visited the monument is part of its story. This archive is a way of making us all part of the on-going history of this incredible place.”

Helena Myska recreating a family photo taken at Stonehenge in 1971

The call comes in a year that marks an important anniversary for Stonehenge. A hundred years ago, in 1918, local barrister Cecil Chubb and his wife Mary gifted the monument to the nation. This public spirited decision marked a turning point in the history of Stonehenge as a much needed programme of restoration began almost immediately, starting a centenary of care and conservation at Stonehenge which continues to this day.  Throughout 2018, English Heritage is celebrating the centenary of the gift, and discovering what this iconic monument means to people today.

Cecil and Mary Chubb formally donated Stonehenge to the nation on 26 October 1918 and English Heritage is inviting people to join them at the stones on Friday 26 October 2018 and over that weekend for a few days full of celebration and surprises, orchestrated by the Turner prize-winning artist Jeremy Deller.  

To share your photographs and stories of Stonehenge and to see those of others, visit www.stonehenge100.co.uk  

American Taney Roniger was only three years old when she first visited Stonehenge in 1971 with her parents. Her mother photographed Taney with her father (a US army doctor stationed in Belgium) leaning against one of the stones. Almost fifty years later, Taney once against posed in the same spot, only with her husband this time who wore the same woolly jumper as her father did in the original photo
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