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Memories
344 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.
Boating On The Broads
Two years after our first visit we came again, bringing our own river cruisers towed by our own cars. We had located a slipway to launch at Martham boatyard prior to starting the holiday. The location at Martham was ...Read more
A memory of Potter Heigham in 1970 by
Bombing Raids In 1940
Bristol's premier shopping centre was turned into a wasteland of burned out buildings after major bombing raids in 1940, during the Second World War. Bridge Street Summary Bridge Street ran from High Street, rising up a ...Read more
A memory of Bristol by
Born 1942 Left In Late 1950s!
I lived in Lime Tree Road and I was called Rita Simmonds at that time. My gran and granddad lived in Lampton Road, at the Great West Road End. They lived in a terrace of cottages next to a large house which I think was ...Read more
A memory of Hounslow by
Born And Bred On Sunderland Road
I was born at 65 Southey Street, Sunderland Road in 1934. My family, the Towns family, had lived there for years. I went to Sunderland Road School and two of my teachers, Flintoff and Comway, taught my uncles. On ...Read more
A memory of Gateshead in 1940 by
Born In Lincoln
I was born in Lincoln Army Barracks on 7th November 1951. I do not remember my days there apart from leaving in 1955 when we moved abroad. I did pay a visit back there in 1977 but the barracks were being taken down, I am unsure what ...Read more
A memory of Lincoln in 1951 by
Born And Bread Widnes
I was born in major cross st in 1947,then in1953 lived in Smith rd and stated at st Maries . I would like to see any photos from that time at st Maries i did have some but now long gone.
A memory of Widnes
Born And Bred In North Harrow
I lived in The Ridgeway, schooled at Longfield in Sunflower House , motto 'Cheerfulness' which has endured with me as my favourite flower, I grow monsters and matches the attitude Itry to have still! Miss Perks was the ...Read more
A memory of North Harrow by
Born At Barony Hospital
I was born, illegitimately, in Barony Hospital, Nantwich and lived in Church St, Crewe, moving to Cliffe Road when the "slum" houses were demolished and the police station was built there. I moved from my first school Brierley ...Read more
A memory of Crewe in 1954 by
Boston Manor Part 3
Next to the underground depot on the Boston Road was a litte shop called The Acorn. It sold sweetss etc. On the other side of the line where offices are now was Boston Bumps. This was a piece of waste land where we rode our track ...Read more
A memory of Brentford by
Boyhood Memories
I was born in 89 Abbot Street, just off Sunderland Road, in 1932, then we moved to the Gateshead end of Redheugh Bridge. When the Second World War started we moved to 20 Brussel Street. The Davidson family lived in the flat above ...Read more
A memory of Gateshead in 1940 by
Captions
374 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.
This mainly 13th century church, with its broad tower and slim spire, has fine stalls and misericords, as well as some modern mosaic work.
We are looking down on The Square from Middle Row at the bottom of Broad Street.
Here we have a view of the broad main street, with St David's Church and the church hall on the left.
The Phoenix Park Murders, the murder by the 'Invincibles' of the Chief Secretary, Lord Frederick Cavendish, and the Under-Secretary, Thomas Burke, took place near here in broad daylight in May 1882.
Note the broad width of the street where the market used to be held, and the pleasing variety of architecture and raised pavements.
Broad pavements and a dirt road characterise this turn-of-the-century view.
Woodland surrounds many of the broads in the upper stretches of the Bure, providing shelter and seclusion for these early cabin cruisers.
On a clear day, Eastbourne may be seen to the west across Pevensey Bay from Hastings Pier and the sea front.
Many come to admire the broad village green, the leafy lanes and nearby woodland.
Here the stream runs through the broad green in the centre.
Wroxham is at the western gateway to the Broads, and profited greatly from the late 19th-century boom in 'messing about in boats'.
Its broad, spacious street is fringed with brick and weatherboarded cottages in the Wealden style.
A sailing barge, once a common sight on the Broads and Norfolk rivers, is moored opposite the pleasure boats below the yacht station.
Instead of horses and carts, cars now clog the pavement outside the Black Bull.
Arnold Roy spotted the need for provisioning the Broads tourist industry early, and his story is a classic errand boy to shopping magnate story.
The young coxswain in the skiff has misjudged her three-point turn, and is wedged between the quayside and the cruiser.
Running above the course of the Flete brook, this broad street, now one of Torquay's premiere shopping malls, was constructed in 1865 to replace the narrow lane of slums and fishermen's cottages that originally
Instead of horses and carts, cars now clog the pavement outside the Black Bull.
This breezy walk is one of the finest in the western counties, and promenaders enjoy broad vistas of the sea and boats plying between the fishing villages of Mounts Bay.
This colossal building, once home of the controversial Greater London Council, was designed by Ralph Knott and begun in 1912.
During the early 1920s, Broad Street was a busy part of Reading, bustling with cars, trams and shoppers.
Somerton was once a thriving medieval town with fairs, markets, trade and inns.
Instead of horses and carts, cars now clog the pavement outside the Black Bull.
Arnold Roy spotted the need for provisioning the Broads tourist industry early, and his story is a classic errand boy to shopping magnate story.
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