Places
26 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- South Cave, Yorkshire
- South Anston, Yorkshire
- South Elmsall, Yorkshire
- South Kirkby, Yorkshire
- South, Yorkshire
- Athersley South, Yorkshire
- South Dalton, Yorkshire
- South Milford, Yorkshire
- South End, Yorkshire (near Seaton)
- South Duffield, Yorkshire
- South Stainley, Yorkshire
- South Bramwith, Yorkshire
- South Cheek, Yorkshire
- South Crosland, Yorkshire
- South Holme, Yorkshire
- South Kilvington, Yorkshire
- South Otterington, Yorkshire
- South Field, Yorkshire (near Hessle)
- South Bank, Yorkshire
- South Moors, Yorkshire
- South Newbald, Yorkshire
- South Cliffe, Yorkshire
- South Hiendley, Yorkshire
- South Lane, Yorkshire
- South Ossett, Yorkshire
- West End, Yorkshire (near South Cave)
Photos
Sorry, no photos were found that related to your search.
Maps
12 maps found.
Memories
55 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
36th Rotherham St Mary's Scout Troop
I lived all my early days in Jackson Crescent, Monkwood with my parents Margaret and Fred Scaife and my brother Roger. Sadly my mother passed away on 12/12/12. I recall attending Haugh Road Secondary ...Read more
A memory of Swinton by
56 Victoria Terrace
My mum, Esther Scott, lived at the above address and remembers; Jean Gardner, Anne French, Jack, Audray, Ronald & Colin Ripley. Ronald & Colin are on one of her wedding photos! She moved to South Yorkshire ...Read more
A memory of Victoria Garesfield by
Ackworth
My grandparents (Mr and Mrs Scorah) used to live in Town End Avenue, Low Ackworth. I remember visiting them with my mother, while my dad was at war. We used to catch the bus from Scunthorpe to Waterdale, Doncaster. Then we would dash ...Read more
A memory of Ackworth in 1940 by
Annbank Hotel
I remember my dad asking me to go to the hotel in Annbank for his fags (funny how it was always at night), if it wasn't for the promise of getting a bag of crisps for going, I'd surely never go. This was the most scariest hotel, in the ...Read more
A memory of Annbank in 1963 by
Bryannman Hotel Good Times Good Money
I was sent to Lower Bynamman in 1970, to work building up a huge 2400 Marion excavator for Sir Lindsey Parkinson at the GCG (Tyor Gwaith?) opencast site. I lodged at the Bryannam hotel with Dez and Dylis. ...Read more
A memory of Lower Brynamman in 1970 by
Campsall South Yorkshire Nr Doncaster
I lived in Campsall with my dad Joseph (Joe) Smith, my brother Terry and sister Jeanette. My father worked down Askern pit for many years till he retired at the age of around 55. He passed away in 2009 (Feb). ...Read more
A memory of Campsall in 1974 by
Childhood In The 1950s
It breaks my heart to see how the years, short-sighted councillors and rapacious businessmen have ruined this once noble and beautiful seaside resort. How could anybody have countenanced destroying this view for the ...Read more
A memory of Bridlington by
Cricket On The Green
I was brought up in Tennyson Avenue off Sprotborough Road and at weekends in the Summer would cycle 20 or so miles all around south Yorkshire. If on the way to Conisbrough, Barnbrough or the River Don we would pass the ...Read more
A memory of Sprotbrough in 1950 by
Early Life
Otterington Hall is close to South Otterington, North Yorkshire and dates from the early 19th century. I was born in the gatehouse of the Hall, The Lodge, in 1947. The owners were the Furness family (involved in shipping), Sir ...Read more
A memory of Otterington Hall
Easter Hols
We used to come over from Conisbrough near Doncaster with my mam and dad, Raymond Dawson, who came from Buglawton, William Street if I remember, and every year we would watch the carnival and also walk up The Cloud. Does anyone remember ...Read more
A memory of Congleton by
Captions
44 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
This aerial view of the South Yorkshire town of Barnsley centres on the imposing white stone Town Hall with its monolithic central clock tower.
Though within the parish of Rochdale, Saddleworth lay in the extreme south-west of the West Riding of Yorkshire and was long talked of as the part of Yorkshire where Lancastrians lived.
The tall, cylindrical keep with its six massive buttresses was built about 1180 by Henry II's half-brother, Hamelin Plantagenet, and still comes as a surprise as you approach this small South Yorkshire
Two chums (right) march down Commercial Road, in the South Yorkshire colliery village of Skelmanthorpe.
Rawmarsh is a former colliery town north of Rotherham in South Yorkshire.
New Rossington, a village lying to the south of Doncaster, was created when the colliery was sunk into the rich South Yorkshire coalfield.
Still close to the Yorkshire county boundary and south- west of Harworth, Oldcotes village is situated at the crossroads of the A634 and A60; Main Street runs east from the A60 Doncaster Road
The restored cross in the centre of Woodhouse, a South Yorkshire village east of Sheffield, stands on an ancient stepped base and now features a sundial and a weathervane.
The newly-cut village green at South Kirkby, near Hemsworth, gives a neat, urban appearance to this former West Yorkshire mining village.
Non-conformist places of worship, such as this Baptist chapel erected in 1876 at Cononley, just south of Skipton in Airedale, are common in the villages of the Yorkshire Dales, reflecting the stubbornly
The winding gear and smoke-belching chimney of the colliery dominate the end of the council houses of West End Lane, New Rossington, at a time when coal was still king in South Yorkshire.
Elsecar was one of the many collieries which formerly existed in the South Yorkshire coalfield around the village of Hoyland.
Once many villages were clustered around the village pond, and this shot of Finningley in South Yorkshire shows it was no exception.
The commanding tower of the village parish church overlooks the quiet South Yorkshire village of Sprotbrough, now divorced from the neighbouring town of Doncaster by the busy A1M motorway.
When the Sheffield & South Yorkshire Canal was modernised in the early 1980s, several locks were re-sited and enlarged, and this was one of them.
The 'Miners' Welfare' was the community and cultural centre for many South Yorkshire and other coal mining villages.
Walsden is a former woollen town in the Calder Gap between Yorkshire and Lancashire, just to the south of Todmorden.
Perhaps the fisherman is yarning to the children about the hob (a Yorkshire goblin) who is said to live in the hollows to the south of the village.
Perhaps the fisherman is yarning to the children about the hob (a Yorkshire goblin) who is said to live in the hollows to the south of the village.
This view shows a virtually-deserted High Street in the undistinguished former colliery town of Normanton, three miles north of Wakefield in South Yorkshire.
In medieval times Tickhill, which lies 4 miles south of Doncaster, was more important than Sheffield; its castle, built about 1130, was one of the most important in the north - we can just
The sheer volume of boats in the South Bay is amazing.
Thorne was an important inland port linking the South Yorkshire coalfield and the River Don with the Aire and Calder Navigation and the River Humber via the Stainforth and Keadby Canal.
South Yorkshire
Places (26)
Photos (0)
Memories (55)
Books (2)
Maps (12)