Maps

247 maps found.

1919, Tyning Ref. POP855833
1946, Highridge Ref. NPO734666
1919, Highridge Ref. POP734665
1946, Blackmoor Ref. NPO642753
1898, Tyning Ref. RNE855833
1898, Lansdown Ref. RNE752878
1946, Lansdown Ref. NPO752878
1899, Highridge Ref. RNC734665
1898-1899, Bloomfield Ref. RNC644362
1946, Lansdown Ref. NPO752877
1898, Blackmoor Ref. RNE642753
1901, Tewkesbury Ref. HOSM36659
1902, Netham Ref. HOSM36609
1898, White Hill Ref. RNE867874
1898, West End Ref. RNE864053
1919, White Hill Ref. POP867874
1946, Tyning Ref. NPO855832
1898, Clay Hill Ref. RNE669807
1902, North End Ref. HOSM55215
1902, Windmill Hill Ref. HOSM61396

Books

10 books found. Showing results 121 to 10.

Memories

89 memories found. Showing results 51 to 60.

Penhill

Born in 1951, I lived in Lechlade,Ledbury, Highworth, Oldtown, Cunningham Road and I lived on Penhill Drive in the late 1950s, I went to the infants and junior school. In the infants we learned to count by using small stones kept in a ...Read more

A memory of Swindon by Paul Everitt

Pentrebach 1960s

I became familiar with the village and people of Pentrebach and around that area from about 1967, when I began to go out with the daughter of the local Publican / School Bus driver / Sawmill worker, Eddie Williams. I remember ...Read more

A memory of Pentre-bach in 1967 by Tom Ball

Plaistow In The 1940s & 50s

I was born in Sutton Road, Plaistow (Plaster to us locals) in 1944 and from the age of 4 I was free to roam. Things were different then! Barking Road for all the shops, and the pubs. Rathbone Street market on a Saturday, ...Read more

A memory of East Ham by George Davidge

Post War Brownsover

From the late 1940's to 1969 I remember this area as part housing, part prefabricated homes because of the war. Many old features were still around like barges carrying coal on the Oxford canal, the old disused mill, the ...Read more

A memory of Brownsover by John Thompson

Prefabs In Ripple Road Dagenham 1947 To 1959

I was born in Upney hospital in July 1947 and lived in a prefab at 703 Ripple Road. Opposite was a bone/scrap yard and along the road the Ship & Shovel pub. I went to Campbell and Dawson schools ...Read more

A memory of Dagenham by Maureen Morris

Purley / Woodcote 1960's

We lived at 18 The Bridle Road (off Foxley Lane) for many years. Attended Collingwood Boys' School (Wallington) - great school for punishments; Woodcote Secondary (like a holiday camp after Collingwood) and Purley Grammar ...Read more

A memory of Purley in 1964 by Douglas Mitchell

Ratfyn Power Station

In the 1950s I was in the Royal Engineers and came over from Germany to our school of military engineering at Chatham where we did a course in electrical power stations. We were then posted to Bulford barracks, and did our ...Read more

A memory of Bulford in 1954 by Norman Webb

Recent Visit To This Spot

Recently we took my Dad's Canadian cousin to this spot. John Pine (her father) was born here at New Mills, Loddiswell in 1889. William Henry Pine (my great grandfather) was miller and parish overseer. In our family ...Read more

A memory of Loddiswell by Anne Speight

Royal Airforce Gaydon

I was posted to RAF Gaydon in the summer of 1963 after serving 3 years in Cyrpus at RAF Nicosia. I underwent training on the Victor BMK 1 and then to 232 OCU where I found life a lot tougher than I was used to, tiring shift ...Read more

A memory of Gaydon in 1963 by James Maurice Blackford

Summer Holidays At The Avon Water

I would have  been about ten years old and I remember on a lot of hot sunny days packing some jam "pieces" and filling an empty bottle with some diluting orange juice or even just water if there was no juice, ...Read more

A memory of Maddiston in 1975

Captions

172 captions found. Showing results 121 to 144.

Caption For Monkton Combe, The Post Office C1955

Back across the river, via the Batheaston toll bridge, follow the Avon south before turning right to Monkton Combe, a delightful village nestling in the valley of the Midford Brook.

Caption For Clifton, Suspension Bridge C1950

At 245ft above the Avon gorge, it has attracted many suicides and, lately, bungee jumpers.

Caption For Bath, Cleveland Place And Bridge 1929

Beyond Walcot Parade is Cleveland Place, which forms a forecourt to Cleveland Bridge across the Avon.

Caption For Ringwood, Market Place 1890

Ringwood stands on the banks of the meandering River Avon, at the New Forest's western boundary.

Caption For Salisbury, The Close 1906

The Gate leads directly to Harnham Bridge over the River Avon.

Caption For Christchurch, Blackwater Ferry 1900

Christchurch stands on two rivers, the Stour and the Avon, and gets its original name Twyneham, or Tweoxneham, from the Anglo-Saxon meaning 'the town between the two rivers'.

Caption For Bigbury, The Village 1925

Bigbury-on-Sea stands on a promontory above the River Avon, which rises high on southern Dartmoor.

Caption For Salisbury, Harnham Gate C1950

The Gate leads directly to Harnham Bridge over the River Avon.

Caption For Salisbury, From Harnham 1906

The Cathedral spire dominated the surrounding countryside in previous centuries just as it does today.This view is from Harnham Hill, looking north eastwards across the Avon and an area of farmland

Caption For Hungerford, St Lawrence's Parish Church 1903

Standing alone alongside the Kennet and Avon canal, this church is the main place of worship for the parish.

Caption For Ringwood, Avon Castle 1891

With its 13-acre grounds and Avon river frontage, the castle became a popular weekend retreat for Turner Turner's many friends.

Caption For Salisbury, The Cathedral From The River 1887

In a scene that has changed little in 100 years, the tranquil surface of the River Avon gently reflects the majesty of the Cathedral and its magnificent 404 feet spire, the highest in England.

Caption For Port Talbot, Station Road 1952

Situated on the mouth of the Avon, it is a popular seaside resort, and boasts a harbour with the deepest berthing facilities in the British Isles.

Caption For Odiham, Canal Wharf 1906

It was never a financial success because of its rural course, and the success of the Kennet & Avon Canal put paid to the owners' hopes.

Caption For Bath, Roman Baths 1901

The Roman town of Aquae Sulis, now Bath, grew up at the point where the Fosse Way crossed the River Avon with hot spring-fed baths as its focus, where citizens of the Empire flocked for rheumatic cures

Caption For Bathampton, The Canal And George Inn 1907

In the 1790s the Kennet and Avon Canal swept past at first floor window level of the 17th-century George Inn to cut it off from the High Street.

Caption For Bath, General View 1874

Taken from near the Wells Road above the south bank of the River Avon, this is an archive view, for much was destroyed in the Baedeker and other bombing raids during World War II.

Caption For Salisbury, Harnham Bridge 1928

Nearly seven hundred years later, the bridge was still carrying all south-bound traffic around the city and across the Avon, but a new bridge was built just downstream in 1931.

Caption For Salisbury, Harnham Bridge 1928

Then, it carried all the traffic from the south over the Avon into Salisbury.

Caption For Bradford On Avon, Silver Street 1900

The New Bear Hotel, left, is now Silver Street House, having been restored by Bradford on Avon Preservation Trust in 1977.

Caption For Bradford On Avon, Holy Trinity Church C1955

In his 'Bradford on Avon Past and Present', Harold Fassnidge describes the carillon, dating from 1614, as having been augmented over the years; it now has a repertoire of hymns played regularly.

Caption For Bidford On Avon, High Street 1899

Bidford-on-Avon is one of eight villages satirically described in a rhyme attributed to William Shakespeare and penned after a heavy drinking session.

Caption For Clifton, Bridge 1900

Even at this late date there were people advocating the 'dockisation' of the Avon, which would have resulted in the destruction of much of the natural beauty of the Gorge and the wholesale removal of Horseshoe

Caption For Compton Bishop, Village And Crook Peak 1907

This route heads for the beautiful Mendip Hills, the carboniferous limestone ridge that separates the Avon valley and Bath and Bristol from the rest of Somerset.