Places
6 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
62 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
20 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
77 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Update Of Those Memories Of The 60,S.
And so i became a full teenage worker, ha ha , off to earn all that fabulous money, to buy all i wanted and roll around every where in style, be like the grown ups , drink beer down the pub or up the pub in ...Read more
A memory of Menithwood in 1966 by
Tanktops And Bellbottoms
Tank tops and bell bottoms-memoirs of a Birkenhead lad I was born in Birkenhead in 1954 at the back of Central Station, opposite the Haymarket, and still remember being hungry all the time. We were poor, as was everyone ...Read more
A memory of Birkenhead by
Never Forget
i was born in kidsgrove in 1958 at 42 gloucester rd my name is tony villella. i remember red rock,was very hard to climb and the black hills and the old tower.does any body remember the broken down church behind st johns,the grave yard ...Read more
A memory of Talke in 1970 by
My Coming To Canada
We sailed across the Atlantic on the Empress of England from Liverpool to Montreal, first arriving in Quebec City on Oct 30, 1958. It makes me wonder if this photo is of that same voyage!! I would love to obtain a passenger ...Read more
A memory of Liverpool in 1958 by
Dunmurry In The 60s & 70s
I lived in dunmurry for 16 years from 1960 until 1976 the things that i remember in the village were the two barber shops the first one was beside jack norths sweet shop on the bridge where as a young boy i remember being left ...Read more
A memory of Dunmurry by
Childhood Home
The large house to the left of this photograph is my chidlhood home, Brynderwen. It is at the bottom of Field Street , opposite the Con Club, next to the Surgery. My father was one of the local Doctors who ...Read more
A memory of Pen-y-graig in 1961 by
Yorkshire
Hello all you Yorkshire people, wherever you may now be... Here is a poem I wrote about good old York. Enjoy. Shopping in the Shambles on a snowy Christmas Eve Playing hide and seek in Acomb Wood Watching Andy Pandy by the fire in our ...Read more
A memory of York in 1955 by
Yesterday When I Was Young
I moved to Wordsley when my father died in a tragic motorcycle accident in Old Hill, although I was born in Bradley Rd, Stourbridge in 1948. We moved to Wordsley in 57 or 58. Some of my memories are so vivid of the ...Read more
A memory of Wordsley in 1959 by
Wickham Bishops Born And Bred
In 1950 I was born on a cold winter's night to my mother Rosemary Jesse, at 'The Black Houses', Kelvedon Road, Wickham Bishops, built by architect, designer and socio-economic theorist Arthur Heygate Macmurdo. ...Read more
A memory of Wickham Bishops by
Captions
12 captions found. Showing results 1 to 12.
Here we see the Black Rock, Black Rock Quarry and Black Rock Cottage, and behind is the bridge over the railway.
This view of the overhanging, topmost rocks of the Black Rocks shows some of the many examples of graffiti, some of which is Victorian, which deface the gritstone boulders in the foreground
Rock lies opposite Padstow (background) on the shore of the Camel estuary.
The character of Antrim's coast is nowhere better expressed than where it is possible to see the black basalt overlying the white chalk rocks, as here at the Wishing Arch.
Looking eastwards from the cliffs above Black Rock.
Whitehead is a popular resort and the pebble beach is much in evidence in this view looking round to Black Head.
The Black Rock had long been a hazard to navigation for ships entering or leaving Liverpool.
Known today for its caravan parks and the long sandy beach of Black Rock sands, Morfa Bychan, just west of Porthmadog, was long celebrated for the story of Dafydd Garreg-Wen, the blind harpist, known for
This wonderful nostalgic photograph shows steam engine 'black 5', the work-horse of the LMS region, heading south with non-corridor stock on a local, probably to Bamber Bridge and on to Blackburn.
bestrides a hundred feet above the observer, rendered doubly gloomy by its narrowness, and the wood which overhangs it; the stunning noise of the torrent thundering at his feet, and struggling through black
bestrides a hundred feet above the observer, rendered doubly gloomy by its narrowness, and the wood which overhangs it; the stunning noise of the torrent thundering at his feet, and struggling through black
Captain 'Black Jock' Porteous was in command of the city guard that took Wilson to his execution.
Places (6)
Photos (62)
Memories (77)
Books (0)
Maps (20)