Blubberhouses, West Yorkshire
Blubberhouses maps
Historic maps of Blubberhouses and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Blubberhouses maps
Blubberhouses photos
We have no photos of Blubberhouses, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Dacre Banks, BirstwithBlubberhouses books
Displaying 3 of 22 books about Blubberhouses and the local area. View all Blubberhouses books
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Blubberhouses
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West Yorkshire memories
My Grandfather, D J R Wilson had lived in Dacre Banks since just after the end of the war meaning that as a child would often have to visit. As a teenager I never appreciated just how beautiful the place is, or how lucky I was to have somewhere like this to visit.
Sadly I would imagine that I will... [more]
Shared on 05 August 2009
I was born in The Semon Emergency Hospital August 1943 and often wondered what it looked like and why I was actually born there and not in Bradford which is where my birth mother lived at the time, unless she was visiting Ilkley and was taken there as an emergency. I was adopted soon after birth. But have since met up... [more]
Shared on 25 March 2007
It's not really memory but a request. I come from Bedlington in Northumberland and have found out my grandfather was born in Otley on 24/03/1901. He was born in 16 Burras Lane. Today I visited with only this scant information and I was fortunate to see it was still as least a street but the house gone, although the church closeby... [more]
Shared on 23 March 2009
I'd visited Otley the town in the 1960s, walking and rockclimbing as a lad of 18 /20 with friends I met at work in the woollen mills of Bradford and Shipley. My first memory is of looking down from the Chevin to this beautiful view of Otley. My new girlfriend Rosemary Finn and I had walked from Yeadon one summer evening... [more]
Shared on 26 October 2008
My father was the manager at the bottom tannery in Shaw Mills and we lived in Sunny Lea from 1955 - 1960. Although I was only 6 when we left, I have numerous vivid memories of that idyllic time and feel privileged to have lived there.
My sister and I used to walk up to Hardcastle's farm to get eggs and... [more]
Shared on 06 March 2009
Anyone remember Mrs Cladd who lived in a converted railway carriage - at least I think thats what it was - just up from Fairfax Hall, opposite the house called Farthings? She was an old lady who grew what we now call cherry tomatoes, but they were a delicious novelty then, and she sold them for a shilling a pound.... [more]
Shared on 21 July 2008
Muriel Currie's memory of living in Harrogate.
I remember working at the Stylo shoe store on Cambridge Street, also at the Turner shoe store on Cambridge Street and later on at the Robert Hirst raincoat factory in Oatlands. Hello to anyone who remembers me, my E-Mail address is: smokeycat66@yahoo.com My home address is 2960 Gold Rush Lane, Heritage Ranch, Paso Robles, California... [more]
Shared on 06 February 2010
Here is Station Square appearing as its architects intended, an open airy town centre piece. The gardens in the foreground are the Coronation Gardens of c.1953, which complimented the Victorian square admirably. Just as this picture was being taken, the lovely old and deliberately 'low roofed' railway station was being totally ruined by the new overscale Station Tower and new station... [more]
Shared on 17 January 2009
Extracts From Blubberhouses & West Yorkshire books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Blubberhouses, inspired by Frith photos.
Bradford Photographic Memories
The park boasted three acres of ornamental water, landscaped into sinuous curves. In the distance rowers are rounding a wooded island. In 1926 the boating was leased to Mr Fred Falkingham, who maintained a trim fleet of rowing-boats for visitors, as well a motor-launch. Manoeuvring the dinghy in such a tight space must have been a little daunting.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Guisborough Photographic Memories
In this delightful and evocative view, we see the north or `top' side of Westgate. On the extreme left is the watchmaker's and jeweller's shop of George Page, a keen amateur photographer; many of his photographs of events in the town were taken from his first floor drawing room window, shown here, with the distinctive clock below. Like many trades-people in the town, Mr and Mrs Page lived... [more]
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Guisborough Photographic Memories
This is the bottom or western end of Westgate. The fine double avenue of trees, principally horse chestnuts, were originally planted in 1887 to mark Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee, then mainly re- planted in 1910. The planting of the trees was an imaginative piece of landscaping, and in their full maturity in the mid 20th century they gave tremendous pleasure to residents of the town. In recent years many have died, sad to say,... [more]
Read more and see photos from this book.
