Maps

2,127 maps found.

Map Of Buckinghamshire, Buckinghamshire Ref. F03
1898 - 1919, Brill Ref. HOSM38941
1898 - 1919, Cuddington Ref. HOSM42548
1897 - 1898, Dunsmore Ref. HOSM44049
1898, Halton Ref. HOSM47431
1898, Halton Ref. HOSM47444
1897 - 1898, Marsh Ref. HOSM53202
1898, Whitchurch Ref. HOSM64429
1897 - 1919, Southend Ref. HOSM59774
1919, Upton Ref. POP858072
1919, Waterend Ref. POP861629
1919, Westcott Ref. POP865352
1919, Thornborough Ref. POP846989
1919, Townsend Ref. POP851262
1947, Fern Ref. NPO704523
1946, Leckhampstead Ref. NPO754377
1946, Horton Ref. NPO740853
1946, Halton Ref. NPO725814
1919, Leckhampstead Ref. POP754377
1946, Botley Ref. NPO646616

Books

10 books found. Showing results 1 to 10.

Memories

36 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.

A Child's View.

I moved to Woldingham with my Mother (she worked for Sir James and Lady Marshall at Whistlers Wood) when I was five years old (1951). I remember my Mother ordering food from Saffins and this I believe was delivered. Also remember ...Read more

A memory of Woldingham by dlplant

Slough, Bucks And Denham Middlesex

I was born in Slough in 1938. It was in Buckinghamshire then. I eventually lived in Denham, Buckinghamshire (see my posting for Memories of Denham in the Middlesex listing). Since I left England in 1959, the changes ...Read more

A memory of Slough in 1955 by w.m.smith

Blacksmith's Yard

My paternal grandmother Annie Cowell came from Stanford and I have always been led to believe that the space on the left of the house in the foreground, where the trees are, was the site of her father's blacksmith's ...Read more

A memory of Stanford-le-Hope in 1940 by Gordon Mead

My Mother Was Evacuated To Buckinghamshire Twice!

Britain declared war on Germany in September 1939, and this country's involvement in the Second World War began. German air-raids and gas attacks were expected imminently, and many children ...Read more

A memory of Princes Risborough in 1940 by Julia Skinner

Mr George Baker, Wooburn Green

My Great Grandfather George Henry Baker (1880 -m1947) was the owner (following his father also George Henry) of the Blacksmith and Scrap Metal Dealer later known as Slades Scrap Yard In Wooburn Green. My Great ...Read more

A memory of Wooburn Green by dmdundjer

St Johns

The memories flood back.. prompted by Jeffrey Hardwick or 'Sir Cedric' as a teacher dubbed him when we were at Horsleys Green School in Buckinghamshire together. What can I say? I remember all the people he mentions, in fact I married ...Read more

A memory of Failsworth in 1960 by Jeffrey Newell

Totteridge Buckinghamshire

We moved to High Wycombe just after the war when Dad came home and he went back to work for the London Transport at the bottom of Marlow Hill. We lived at first in Suffield Road and I went to the Church Of England ...Read more

A memory of Tylers Green in 1947 by Anne Sheridan

Visiting Auntie Freda Eggington At Rose Cottage In Summer

y nethier did Wendy she fell in love with this prettymyself and my wife wendy took mum,phyllis to visit aunty freda. it was a very long journey as we live in buckinghamshire. rose ...Read more

A memory of Penton Grafton in 1980 by Stephen Rowe

Hairdressers Banstead High Street 1969 1973

I worked as a Saturday girl at the hairdressers opposite the church in Banstead High Street when I was 15 in 1969. It was called Nicolette then and I worked for Margaret and her mother Mrs Anscombe. ...Read more

A memory of Banstead in 1969 by Karen Farrell

Trying To Remember The Road I Lived On

Am trying to piece together my life while in England. I was sent to some kind of institution when I was a few months old, probably in 1945/46. I believe that place was in the North of England. Then my mother ...Read more

A memory of Heston in 1949 by Paul Langseth

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Captions

24 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.

Caption For Waddesdon, The Manor, South Front 1897

117Southern England BUCKINGHAMSHIRE WADDESDON, Waddesdon Manor,

Caption For Cookham, The River 1901

The celebrated village of Cookham, a mile or so south of Bourne End, is seen here from the boatyard on the Buckinghamshire bank, although curiously until 1992 a strip of about 30 feet along

Caption For Maidenhead, Skindles Hotel 1906

This view is from the Buckinghamshire bank, looking north from the A4 Bath Road immediately east of the bridge.

Caption For Waddesdon, The White Lion Hotel 1901

In the distance is the Five Arrows Hotel; the five arrows symbolise the five Rothschild brothers - the badge is seen on houses and cottages all over central Buckinghamshire.

Caption For Chesham, The Bury 1897

It was built in 1712 for William Lowndes, Secretary to the Treasury, who came from Winslow in central Buckinghamshire where in 1700 he had built Winslow Hall.

Caption For Windsor, The Castle From Brocas 1890

The Brocas is the name given to Eton's riverside meadows on the former Buckinghamshire bank.

Caption For Maids Moreton, The Parish Church C1955

It is a church that should be visited, and one of my favourite ones in Buckinghamshire.

Caption For Aylesbury, Parish Church 1897

The large parish church is mostly 13th- century, but it was heavily restored by the great architect Sir George Gilbert Scott, a native of Buckinghamshire, between 1849 and 1869.

Caption For Bow Brickhill, The Parish Church C1960

In 1960 there were fine views from here across north Buckinghamshire; now trees obscure this completely in summer, but in winter we can look north-west over the new city of Milton Keynes, and

Caption For Maidenhead, Mill House 1899

This view of the Mill House, further north along the Buckinghamshire bank, captures wonderfully the curious formality of late Victorian leisure activity as the fishermen sit stiffly in

Caption For London, The Oxford Arms, Warwick Lane C1875

In the 1700s coaches left here for Chester, Highworth in Wiltshire and Wendover in Buckinghamshire.

Caption For Eton, Barnes Pool 1923

On the Buckinghamshire bank (since 1974 in Berkshire) Henry VI's great foundation, Eton College, has rendered this another 'company town'.

Caption For Lavendon, The Parish Church C1965

This is the furthest north part of Buckinghamshire, beyond the stone-built market town of Olney, and not far from the Northamptonshire border.

Caption For Bozeat, Red Lion C1950

Close to the county boundary with Buckinghamshire and Bedfordshire, the unusually-named village of Bozeat was at the heart of a thriving weaving industry 600 years ago; the Weavers' Guild donated a rich

Caption For Coleshill, The Church C1955

This village was an enclave of Hertfordshire, being transferred to Buckinghamshire in 1832, and there are many good 16th and 17th century timber-framed farmhouses and cottages within the parish.

Caption For Aylesbury, County Asylum, Stone 1897

Buckinghamshire's County Lunatic Asylum was built at Stone, three miles west of Aylesbury, in the early 1850s.

Caption For Linslade, The Grand Union Canal C1960

Until 1966, Linslade was a small, mainly Victorian town located in Buckinghamshire.

Caption For Amersham, High Street C1950

The photographer has now moved west down the High Street, a superb long and wide street lined by timber-framed and brick houses - one of the best historic townscapes in Buckinghamshire.

Caption For Castle Ashby, The House C1955

We now move away from boot and shoe country into the south of Northamptonshire close to the border with Buckinghamshire.

Caption For Tring, Park 1897

Tring is in Hertfordshire, a market town at the base of a salient of the county that projects into Buckinghamshire from the Chilterns along the valley of the River Bulbourne.

Caption For Aylesbury, Church Street 1921

On the right is the Buckinghamshire County Museum housed in Ceely House, the house with the porch on the right, and in the old Grammar School beyond.

Caption For Cockfosters, The College, Trent Park C1965

Middlesex University, the whole has taken on a care-worn air, which even extends to the early 18th-century garden statues by John van Nost, which were brought to the house by Sir Philip Sassoon from Stowe in Buckinghamshire

Caption For Bletchley, Tree Square C1955

On one of Stony Stratford's first bridges over the River Great Ouse, Grilkes Inn had been operating since 1317, possibly the oldest alehouse in Buckinghamshire; and the Cross Keys (1475) and the

Caption For High Wycombe, Hughenden Manor 1906

Elected a town councillor and alderman in 1870, he was elected to Buckinghamshire County Council at its inception in 1889 and appointed a magistrate for the county in 1895.