Hi April Unfortunately number 10 no longer exists. During WW2 this end of Odo Road suffered damage from enemy shelling. Numbers 6, 8 & 10 were demolished. A pair of semi-detached houses were subsequently built in the space formerly occupied by the three houses. These were numbered 6 & 8 and the next house along is therefore number 12. So number 10 is gone for ever. All the best Dave Dixon BA (hons) - Economic & Social History - University of Kent - Canterbury 1997 www.fadedgenes.co.uk On 27 March 2012 15:35, April <[email protected]> wrote: > In the 1911 census my grandfather was living at No.10 Odo Road, Dover. > > A kind gentle man has just sent me a photograph of the 1919 peace party > given in the street. My grandfather and his family could be amongst the > people shown there but I am not sure. > > He was listed as a Master Mariner and he worked for the War Department > on a ship at Dover. > > Looking at recent google streetmaps of Odo Road, I find it difficult to > find No. 10. Have I missed it? Is it still there? It could have been a > naval house or his own or rented. I have no idea as I have taken up > researching this grandfather that I never knew as his wife Ada died 2 > years before I was born. He later remarried and lived Woolwich London. > > My mother Winifred Pressey was born at No.10 Odo Road as shown in the > 1911 census but I do not know how long they were there or where they > moved on to. Any help would be appreciated. I know they moved about. > I suppose his work for the War Department was the reason. > > Thank you for any leads. > > April > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >