Did you guess the location of last week’s Mystery Photograph? We were in Pensford – and thank you to those of you who have submitted your fantastic competition photographs – there’s still time to enter if you would like to take your best shot of the scene!

Well done to: Paul Hancock, Simon Chard, Winston Eyles, Keith and Loraine Pursey, Ivor Davis, Dan Clark, Jonathan Griffin, Terry Reakes, Andy Matthews, Frankie Ford, Bob Ford, Neil Gillard, Ken Cottle, Les Box and Hannah Selway, Gilmour Jones, Simon Ball, John Sage, Hugh Weeks, Bridget Ashman, Elaine Bowen, Judith Bohan, Val Hawkins, Chris Rhymer, Graham Sage, Beryl Rhymer, Sally Bown, Martin Horler, Judith Stanford, Wayne Heatley, Andrea Potter, Sarah Fogden, Tony Jones, Terry Paget, Guy (via Twitter), Joan Chappell, Shirley Steel and Jeff Parsons, who all guessed correctly. We now challenge one of you to take a stunning photograph of the scene for the museum!

Reader, Jonathan Griffin, tells us: “I’m a volunteer at the S&D station, Silver Street. One of the volunteers there started his working life on the GWR in Bristol in the mid-sixties, working his way up to fireman on 0-6-0 Pannier Tank locos, sometimes crossing Pensford viaduct. As it did not have the psychological benefit of a parapet, crossing the viaduct was not an experience for the faint-hearted!”

Terry Paget also has some information about the previous week’s picture. He says: “No mention was made of the largest and oldest feature in last week’s Midsomer Norton picture, the mill stream.

“The Wellow Brook rises in Chilcompton, and was divided at the weir at the bottom of Church Lane. The main stream now flows around St Chad’s Well and the White Hart, then down the Island under the pavement past the Town Hall, emerging in the High Street. The mill stream flowed straight on, behind the Old Vicarage, eventually turning a water wheel on the mill, rejoining the main stream outside the White Hart.

“The mill dates back to mediaeval times, and is presumably the water mill mentioned in the Domesday book. The weir remains, and the name ‘the Island’ describes the area of land enclosed by the two streams.”

If you think you know where this week’s ‘Then’ photograph may have been taken, email: [email protected] or send your answer to us via Facebook: @MNRJournal.

Answer next week!