Features / Sea Mills

70-year-old long lost photo album reunited with family

By Mary Milton  Wednesday Aug 3, 2022

Stephanie Sweet was shocked when she heard her family name mentioned in an appeal on the BBC Radio Bristol breakfast show.

“I heard the name Betty Sweet but when I heard Cecil’s name as well I knew that was our family,” she recalls.

The radio item featured a mystery photo album that had been found in a loft in Sea Mills and brought along to an event being jointly run by Bristol Museums, Bristol Archives, Sea Mills 100 and the Bristol and Avon Archaeological Society.

Independent journalism
is needed now More than ever
Keep our city's journalism independent. Become a supporter member today.

The Found it! event encouraged people to bring along items found in their homes, left by previous residents. The album had been found in the loft of a house in Sylvan Way by Beth Bennett.

“It was one of a few things left in the corner of the loft, it seemed wrong to throw it away,” said Beth.

Very few of the photographs in the album were captioned and none included surnames. Two wedding photographs provided just enough information for experts at Bristol Archives to identify the couples.

Betty and Cecil’s wedding photos, taken outside Buckingham Chapel helped return the album to the Sweet family – photo: Mary Milton

As the photographs were dated, once it was confirmed they had been taken at Buckingham Baptist Chapel in Clifton, the marriage registers revealed their identities.

One of the couples was Cecil Bradford and Betty Sweet who were married in 1945. Stephanie’s late husband Bob was Betty’s second cousin. Stephanie has been working on the Sweet family tree since the 1990s and has information going back generations.

There’s no obvious family link to the house in which the photographs were found so how it got there is, for the moment, a puzzle. Stephanie is delighted to have the album back in the family and is hoping to identify more of the people in the photographs and discover how it came to be abandoned in a house in Sea Mills.

Mary Milton is reporting on Sea Mills as part of Bristol24/7’s community reporter scheme, a project which aims to tell stories from areas of Bristol traditionally under-served by the mainstream media

Main photo: Mary Milton

Read more: Bristol diary unlocks wartime double agent’s secret

Listen to the latest Bristol24/7 Behind the Headlines podcast:

Our top newsletters emailed directly to you
I want to receive (tick as many as you want):
I'm interested in (for future reference):
Marketing Permissions

Bristol24/7 will use the information you provide on this form to be in touch with you and to provide updates and marketing. Please let us know all the ways you would like to hear from us:

We will only use your information in accordance with our privacy policy, which can be viewed here - www.bristol247.com/privacy-policy/ - you can change your mind at any time by clicking the unsubscribe link in the footer of any email you receive from us, or by contacting us at meg@bristol247.com. We will treat your information with respect.


We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By clicking below to subscribe, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing. Learn more about Mailchimp's privacy practices here.

Related articles

You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Independent journalism
is needed now More than ever
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Join the Better
Business initiative
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
* prices do not include VAT
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Enjoy delicious local
exclusive deals
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Wake up to the latest
Get the breaking news, events and culture in your inbox every morning