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Memories

472 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.

Ulverston Cons Bowling Green Wall

I play bowls at Ulverston Cons the wall and the house behind have never changed think the bowling green was opened in 1911 before that it was a market garden the dividing wall is still there and a house is on the other side of the dividing wall.

A memory of Ulverston

Trethomas Or Bedwas Pit

I too remember looking through the bedroom window of my Auntie Olga's house in Bryn Y Fran Ave and watching the clouds of steam rising from the coke oven in the skyline. I also remember going to meet my Uncle 'Herbie' ...Read more

A memory of Trethomas in 1950 by Glyn Mallett

Trefdraeth Bodorgan In The 50s

My memories of Trefdraeth in Bodorgan Mr Lewis the vicar - respect and fear. Washi Bach - the tramp - dread The Grocery van coming round on a Friday - fantastic, fresh bread, picking from a selection of penny ...Read more

A memory of Bodorgan by Catherine Jones

Travellers Rest Public House

My g g uncle George and Aunt Louisa had the Travellers Rest from about 1881, he is still there in 1901, they raised 7 children there, all who at one time or another worked for their parents. He left there and ...Read more

A memory of Little Sutton in 1890 by Rosemary Abraham

Tracing Info For A Martin Dougan Watt

Hi I wonder if anyone can help. I have been trying to trace family of my late father. His name was Martin Dougan Watt and he was born in Newtonairds on 11th March 1931. I don't know his parents' name or ...Read more

A memory of Newtonairds in 1930

Tooting 1948 1971

I was born in Balham in 1948 and lived initially in a flat in Trinity Road near the then police station with Mum, Dad and Aunty Edie, and finally in a bay-fronted twenties house on Tooting Bec Road until I left home to go to ...Read more

A memory of Tooting by Marion Coward

Tom Lizzie Cook

1948 - onwards. My Mother and her two cousins were brought up by their Aunt and Uncle as above and I spent all my childhood holidays with them. Great Aunt Liz was well known for her teas for visitors and ramblers from CHA Porlock. ...Read more

A memory of Culbone in 1948 by Rose Marie Davies

To Sea

The Seagoing Years. I must have left the Army sometime in August or September of 1949, and went back to C.J.King & son, tug owners, to carry on with my job as deck boy. This was not to my ...Read more

A memory of Bristol in 1950 by Arthur Cottrell

Time Gentlemen Please!

We came to live in Thaxted in about 1950, and though we lived in one of  the Borough Cottages, Bolford Street, which then were in a bad state, for me,  fresh out of an institution ( I was only eight), it was the most wonderful ...Read more

A memory of Thaxted in 1950 by Pat Weedon

Thursley

I grew up in Hindhead near Thursley in the 1960s and this story was extremely well known locally. On the walk which we did often up to Gibbet Hill above the Devil's Punch Bowl you would pass the Sailor's Stone memorial which told the ...Read more

A memory of Thursley by Sally Partington

Captions

169 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.

Caption For Rothley, The Park C1955

Over-arm bowling arrived officially in 1864, and the first Test Match was played in Australia in 1877.

Caption For Rothley, The Park C1955

Over-arm bowling arrived officially in 1864, and the first Test Match was played in Australia in 1877.

Caption For St Neots, The Rotary Club Millennium Clock 2005

The need for additional leisure facilities had long been recognised and an important move in this direction came with the opening of the Eat 'N' Bowl bowling alley in Huntingdon Street in August

Caption For Abergavenny, Frogmore Street 1914

The White Horse Hotel, right foreground, advertises its select bowling saloon.

Caption For Abergavenny, Frogmore Street 1914

The White Horse Hotel, right foreground, advertises its select bowling saloon.

Caption For Buxton, In Corbar Woods 1915

This wooded area to the north of the town was laid out and intersected with walks in the latter half of the 19th century and remain today a pleasant, if steep walk to the northern rim of the bowl

Caption For Launceston, High Street 1906

The corner shop, here selling crockery, tin bowls and leather bags, is now Peter Briggs, a shoe shop, but it remains largely unchanged, even preserving the same windows we see here.

Caption For Launceston, High Street 1906

The corner shop, here selling crockery, tin bowls and leather bags, is now Peter Briggs, a shoe shop, but it remains largely unchanged, even preserving the same windows we see here.

Caption For Wetherby, North Street 1909

The complete sign on the left, Tetley's Fine Ales, was fixed to the old Bowling Green Hotel; it marked the narrowest point on the London to Edinburgh Great North Road.

Caption For Low Row, The Punch Bowl Hotel 1924

The Old Gang Mine, one of the oldest workings, is a few miles from here, and would have brought the miners to the warmth of the Punch Bowl Inn, which was built in 1638.

Caption For Sudbury, Market Hill And St Peter's C1960

On the right the Westminster Bank has replaced Bowles the draper's (see 51156, p.27), Sketchley dry cleaners has replaced the fish shop, and the imposing Lloyds Bank stands next door.

Caption For Altofts, Horse And Jockey 1959

Back in 1880 an orchard, stables, piggeries, a bowling green and two cottages surrounded the pub.

Caption For Launceston, High Street 1906

The corner shop, here selling crockery, tin bowls and leather bags, is now Peter Briggs, a shoe shop, but it remains largely unchanged, even preserving the same windows we see here.

Caption For Lyme Regis, Harbour 1890

The picture is from the terraced Tennis Grounds; by Victorian times these were the town's main exercise area, after bowling fell out of favour and golf courses had yet to be constructed.

Caption For Bashall Eaves, The Village C1955

The blacksmith's shop and the wheelwright's were next to each other, and the smith obliged with extras: 'blowers' to 'wuther up' the fire and iron hoops for the boys to bowl.

Caption For Wareside, The Village C1955

It dates from the 16th century, and was originally the Chequers and Punch Bowl.

Caption For Keighley, From Parish Church C1900

Broth with dumplings cost one penny a bowl. We

Caption For Dorking, The Cemetery, Reigate Road 1906

Its original name was the Punch Bowl Inn; it was built in 1780 and designed by Sir John Soane (1753-1837), the distinguished architect and collector of Greek and Roman artefacts.

Caption For Plymouth, The Hoe 1904

Sailor, circumnavigator, mayor, MP, bowls player, scourge of the Spanish – he crammed a lot into his 51 years.

Caption For Basildon, 'brunswick' Lower Dunton Road, Langdon Hills 2005

The exciting Festival Leisure Park has a wide mix of attractions including a multiplex cinema, a huge ten pin bowling centre, an indoor tennis and fitness centre, nightclubs, family entertainment

Caption For Leatherhead, On The Mole 1902

A bowler-hatted gentleman contemplates this tranquil river scene looking towards the gracious arches of the viaduct that carries the railway to Effingham junction.

Caption For Blackdown Camp, Sergeants Mess 1906

One of the huts of Blackdown Camp, with a group of soldiers and a bowler-hatted civilian.

Caption For Cousley Wood, The Village 1899

An evocative picture of this attractive village some two miles north east of Wadhurst and now close to Bewl Bridge Reservoir.

Caption For Netherbury, Village 1902

Standing outside the village Post Office on the left, the bewiskered elderly man leaning on two sticks and wearing a bowler hat was probably a figure of some status in the village, where there were a