Maps

105 maps found.

1920, Round Bush Ref. POP820671
1921, Bush Green Ref. POP657415
1921, Bush Green Ref. POP657417
1898, Threshers Bush Ref. RNC847813
1946, Lower Bush Ref. NPO768872
1946, Peckham Bush Ref. NPO802491
1895, Lower Bush Ref. RNE768872
1905, Bush Ref. HOSM49535
1897-1909, Shepherd's Bush Ref. RNC829716
1946, Cloudesley Bush Ref. NPO671117
1895, Upper Bush Ref. RNE857111
1895, Beggars Bush Ref. RNE636657
1945, Shepherd's Bush Ref. NPO829716
1898, Bush Green Ref. RNE657417
1920, Bush Bank Ref. POP657389
1919, Bush End Ref. POP657395
1920, Cloudesley Bush Ref. POP671117
1921, Bush Green Ref. POP657416
1946, Round Bush Ref. NPO820671
1946, Upper Bush Ref. NPO857111

Books

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Memories

348 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.

1967 Rlch

I spent most of my childhood in and out of the hospital and have such wonderful happy memories. I was usually on Charlie Mac ward (Charles McAllister). I remember Sister Bromley (spoke to her only a few of years ago), Dr Burston and Peter ...Read more

A memory of Heswall by Jane Ballinger

A Beautiful Place

I arrived in 1953 to live with my father and stepmother in Marbury. I have very mixed feelings of my life here. The countryside was beautiful, my love of nature and animal life has never left me. Bill's lawns (our name for the ...Read more

A memory of Marbury in 1953 by Robert Chambers

A Great Place To Live

Having been born and brought up in Buckhusrt Hill in the 1960s and 1970s and 1980s and now living in Kent, it reminds me what a unique place it once was. My immediate memories are of Lords Bushes and living in Forest ...Read more

A memory of Buckhurst Hill by Andrew Evans

A Strong Memory

I was born in 1931. During the war I spent about 1 year in Walkford, at the home of a great aunt in the village of Walkford. The maternal ancestry of my family is in Walkford. My great aunt had a house on I guess the Ringwood road. ...Read more

A memory of Walkford in 1943 by Patricia Hardwicke

A Young Boy In Cranford 1949 1955

My name is Michael Mancey. In 1949, when I was four years old, my parents, youngster sister and I, moved to a brand new council house in Windsor Road. Although the postal address was Hounslow West, it was in reality ...Read more

A memory of Cranford in 1950 by Michael Mancey

A Cold And Dim Visit To Banstead Asylum

I cannot remember the exact year but it was very cold. I was a TV repair man at Raylec in the High Street and we had a call from a doctor living in a house at the Asylum. She complained that the picture on ...Read more

A memory of Banstead in 1961 by Adrian King

A Great Start To Life Growing Up In North Bitchburn

Here are just a few of my childhood memories of my youth in North Bitchburn. My name is Ian Pinkney, I lived at No 10 Constantine Road, along with my father Raymond, he was in charge of the ...Read more

A memory of North Bitchburn

A House Fire Along The Redditch Road ?

At the time I lived at 45 Crooks Lane, I must have been about 12 or 13 living with my parents Fred and Sis, approx. 1951 or 1952, when my Dad told me that a rather strange man who lived in a large detached house along ...Read more

A memory of Studley by bob.sylvia01

A Long Way From Australia

I have just started researching and writing a family history for my daughter who was born here in Australia and has little knowledge of the backgrounds of her English grand- and great grandparents. My theme is "Thank you ...Read more

A memory of Eastwood by Paula Stocker

A Lovely Devon Village

We moved to No. 6 Tipton Vale in 1950. Maureen a baby, myself (Valerie) and parents Eric and Joan White fom Fenny Bridges. The house was a new council house, pink and blue. Dad dug out a bank at the rear and we found ...Read more

A memory of Tipton St John in 1950 by Valerie Jordan

Captions

59 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.

Caption For Eton, College And Street 1895

At the junction of Common Road and Slough Road, two College schoolboys, one carrying a cricket bat over his right shoulder, are seen walking past the 'Burning Bush'.

Caption For Mullion, Poldhu Hotel 1899

It is on an extremely windswept location with not a tree or bush in sight, but no doubt the sea views and bracing air were deemed beneficial to guests.

Caption For Beer, Under Hooken Landslip 1927

Trees and bushes have grown on the fallen chalk, creating a perfect haunt for wildlife and a great adventure for hardier ramblers.

Caption For Morwenstow, The Bush Inn C1955

The Bush Inn is at Crosstown, just above the church.

Caption For London, Buckingham Palace C1890

In the time of James I the leafy grounds where this celebrated royal palace now stands grew mulberry bushes for the silk industry.The palace was built in its original form in the early 1700s and

Caption For Runcorn, Transporter Bridge C1906

It was built by John James Webster who was born in Warrington and was later to build the Shepherd's Bush Stadium in London for the Olympic Games of 1908.

Caption For Sutton, The Green 1898

It shows newly-planted bushes and trees, which can be seen in a more mature state in view 85084.

Caption For Richmond, Castle Walk 1893

Looking east, the steep bank has a low covering of bushes which obscure the views if allowed to grow up, and in 2004 a lot of clearing work was done.

Caption For London, Buckingham Palace And The Mall C1955

In the time of James I, the leafy grounds where this celebrated royal place now stands grew mulberry bushes, intended for the silk industry.

Caption For Grange Over Sands, Hazlewood Terrace

The iron fence and bushes in the foreground at the junction with Meathop Road have now gone, and the old street lamp at its end has been replaced by a modern one by the side of the road

Caption For Saffron Walden, Bridge End Gardens, The Dutch Garden C1950

Unfortunately, most of the bushes, although still cared for, have now lost their distinctive shapes.

Caption For Hailsham, The Church C1965

Another view, similar to H6031 (above), shows the brick-paved path and the holly bushes.

Caption For Mobberley, The Bird In Hand C1955

'A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush', goes the old saying; hence the landlord could be warning visitors that a coin in his hand is worth any number of promises - in other words, no credit will

Caption For Bakewell, C1955

The remaining bushes have gone, and the walls have acquired a nice bright coat of paint.

Caption For Richmond, Castle Walk 1893

Looking east, the steep bank has a low covering of bushes which obscure the views if allowed to grow up, and in 2004 a lot of clearing work was done.

Caption For Souldern, The Pond C1960

The name Souldern derives from 'Sulthorn', meaning 'thorn bush in a gully'.

Caption For Waldringfield, The Yacht Club C1955

The two ladies in the distance have just come down from the May Bush Inn.

Caption For Abingdon, The Lock From Downstream 1890

The bushes to the left hide the site of the old abbey at Abingdon, founded in 676 and again in 955 after the original had been destroyed by marauding Danes.

Caption For Rochester, Cathedral From The Vines 1894

This public park, with its neatly-trimmed shrubs and bushes, occupies the former site of the vineyard of the Benedictine monastery founded in 1082 by Bishop Gundulf.

Caption For Kersey, The Village From The Church C1965

The gardener of nearly 40 years ago would be pleased that the box bushes on the left remain today.

Caption For Enfield, Bush Hill Station, St Mark's Road C1955

One stop down the line from Enfield town, Bush Hill Park station was opened in 1880 to service this development by the Northern Estates Company.

Caption For London, Buckingham Palace C1890

In the time of James I the leafy grounds where this celebrated royal palace now stands grew mulberry bushes for the silk industry.The palace was built in its original form in the early 1700s and adapted

Caption For Braunston, The Marina C1965

The line of bushes and trees in the middle distance hide the embankment of the railway line, which ran from Weedon through Daventry to Leamington.

Caption For Lyme Regis, The Cliffs 1906

Lyme Regis is only a mile away, beyond the next bend, but lies hidden behind the woods at the Holm Bush and what is now National Trust land at Ware Cliffs (top left).