Great Yarmouth
Great Yarmouth photos (112 available)
Great Yarmouth maps (2 available)
Great Yarmouth books (14 available)
- 27 photos on Great Yarmouth appear in 9 Frith books - View photos of Great Yarmouth
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Great Yarmouth and Norfolk
Great Yarmouth memories
fond memories
was married at church on sat 3-3-1962,spent first few years of marriage living on upper floor of tower at 98 blackfriars road.i remember well the awful job we had to get our furniture in as the stairs were too steep and winding, had to rope them up through thebedroom/lounge window we shared a kitchen on the lower floor and a shared bathroom and toilet.the tower was owned by olive,sorry i cannot remember her surname, she worked at a butcher shop ,
...read more here
Contributed by john cannell
Blackfriars
I too had an aunt who lived there. In its time, it has had a house on top of the tower and a house on the wall attached to the left. The house on top by then had disappeared.
Through the archway was a line of small cottages with large front gardens. This was known as Adam and Eve's Gardens. I used to go through here to get to Friars Lane where my grandmother lived. Further to my previous statement, this tower whilst located in Blackfriars Rd, is the south east tower, Blackfriars Tower is the next tower to the south and it is round in shape, this tower is shaped like a D. THIS WAS WHERE MY AUNT RESIDED.
Contributed by william nicholls
Mum's memories!
It seems that my great great grandparents lived in Blackfriars Tower, sometime in 1920/1930s. Though my mum had told my sister that she remembers visiitng her grandmother in the Tower, she felt that Mum had confused it with somewhere else. A couple of years later we asked my mum's brother and he too remembered his grandparents living there. Unfortunately both are now dead.
Does anyone know anything of the Tower?
We have current photos of the Tower and of course the Wall is uncovered and laid to grass at the front.
We found it difficult to believe that anyone could have lived there.
The photo was a great discovery. What I'd like now is a photo c1920 and a potted ...read more here
Contributed by maggie martin
Serving the past
I have recently discovered, from the 1881 Census, that my great-grandmother was, with her younger sister, in domestic service to the family of Henry Stone at no.35 Regent Road.He is described as 'organist and music teacher'. I would be thrilled to have any more information about the family or the house itself. Does it appear in this picture?
Is the boy with the goat-cart delivering something?
Contributed by Frances Golynia
Extracts From Great Yarmouth & Norfolk books
In this early view of the beach, there are already signs of local businesses capitalising on the new influx of visitors, with terraces of newly-built lodging houses and cheap hotels. A fleet of numbered pleasure craft is grouped on the sands. There are refreshments booths, gingerbread sellers, seats to rent by the hour, and donkey rides.
An extract from from"Norfolk Photographic Memories".
In this early view of the beach, there are already signs of local businesses
capitalising on the new influx of visitors, with terraces of newly-built
lodging houses and cheap hotels. A fleet of numbered pleasure craft is
grouped on the sands. There are refreshments booths, gingerbread sellers,
seats to rent by the hour, and donkey rides.
An extract from from"Norfolk Pocket Album".
The development of Margate as a resort was founded on the craze
for sea bathing. In this picture bathing machines owned by Edward
Perkins line the beach. Mr Perkins, who described himself as
‘bathing machine proprietor and furniture remover’, also provided
bathing costumes.The covered bathing machine was the invention of
a Margate man, a Quaker called Benjamin Beale, who was born in
about 1717.
An extract from from"Thanet Pocket Album".
This early photograph shows wooden sailing cruisers moored alongside the jetty. The river at this point is wide and tidal. The busy industrial town can be seen on the opposite bank.
An extract from from"Norfok Broads Photographic Memorie".
Along Hall Quay are clustered craft of every kind: flat-bottomed barges, wherries and fishing boats - it is still the age of the sail. On the left is a line of coal wagons: Yarmouth had long been a colliers’ port, and in the 1700s over 200 vessels were registered.
An extract from from"Norfolk Photographic Memories".







