Photos

40 photos found. Showing results 141 to 40.

Maps

524 maps found.

1947, Tylagwyn Ref. NPO855517
1947, Shwt Ref. NPO831008
1899-1900, Nant-Y-Moel Ref. RNC787778
1922, Llangeinor Ref. POP758877
1922, Pencoed Ref. POP803131
1922, Pen-Yr-Heol Ref. POP805036
1922, Pant-Y-Pyllau Ref. POP800111
1922, Pant-Yr-Awel Ref. POP800113
1922, Price Town Ref. POP810757
1947, Cefn Cribwr Ref. NPO665299
1947, Cefn Cross Ref. NPO665301
1947, Ffordd-Y-Gyfraith Ref. NPO704881
1900-1901, North Cornelly Ref. RNC793093
1900-1901, Lletty Brongu Ref. RNC759358
1900-1901, Nottage Ref. RNC794787
1899-1900, Ogmore Vale Ref. RNC796100
1899-1900, Lewistown Ref. RNC755440
1899-1900, Pant-Y-Pyllau Ref. RNC800111
1947, Merthyr Mawr Ref. NPO778451
1947, Rhiwceiliog Ref. NPO815719

Books

2 books found. Showing results 169 to 2.

Memories

1,914 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.

Growing Up In Greenford 1957 1970s

Wow! Thanks for those memories. A million miles away in rural East Anglia, remembering growing up in Greenford. Stanhope Infants and Juniors, Mr Bishop, Mrs Avery, anybody went there remember them? ...Read more

A memory of Greenford by Gill Hewlett

Washington Brady Square

One of three children who lived at Hillthorn Terrace, just next to the railway lines. I can remember as if it was yesterday when the coal train used to travel from Washington "F" Pit down towards Brady Square, through ...Read more

A memory of Washington by Jim Beresford

A History Lesson

I have lived nearby for 10 years and this place eluded me for a while. Tancreds Ford is still a ford but the bridge is the modern equivalent. The reason I am posting this is because it was on the old smugglers route! Contraband ...Read more

A memory of Frensham by Mark Gardiner

Woolwich Ferry

There has been a ferry at Woolwich for many centuries but the people of Woolwich complained in the 1880s that West London had free access across the River Thames by bridges so why couldn't they have free travel? The river was too ...Read more

A memory of Woolwich by First Name Last Name

Happy Days 1950s And 60s

I was born and brought up in Weaverham until I left to move to Altrincham with my new wife (and job). Over that 20 year period I have so many happy memories; too many to record in 1000 words. Lived in Lime Avenue all ...Read more

A memory of Weaverham by George Ellis

The Sun

The building on the left is the Sun pub, which we used to visit when in the sixth form at Stanborough school in the 1970s . Our teachers used it too as it wasn't far from our school so we used to go there more on weekend evenings... We ...Read more

A memory of Lemsford

Lawrence Family In East Molesey

On a holiday from Australia, today my husband and I visited East Molesey & Hampton Court. My mother's paternal family were the Lawrence's - Edward was a master butcher and had a shop in 156 Walton Road (now ...Read more

A memory of East Molesey by Erica Henley

Boyhood Days

My aunts and uncles lived in East Howle and I was a regular visitor around and before 1950. The two families lived opposite one another in what I think may have been "railway cottages" and my cousins totalled 9. In those days you ...Read more

A memory of East Howle

Old Southall Remembered

I lived in old Southall (Norwood Road - Norwood Green end) during the 1960s to the 1990s and have seen great changes. I went to school at Clifton Road, and the school had a great Headmaster, Mr Hancock, for a while. One ...Read more

A memory of Southall

Cappels Shop

I remember going into Cappels shop in the late 1970s and buying kali and liquourice. I also remember going down to Coach bridge, swimming with my friends, and a man called malcolm used to come over on his penny farthing, good times were had by all.

A memory of Nether Heyford by Marie Hanlon

Captions

1,770 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.

Caption For Eaton Socon, The Church C1960

Just after the end of the First World War the town suffered a serious loss with the closure of Days' Brewery.

Caption For Newark, Cemetery Avenue 1904

Burials were forbidden within the town, and a plague pit was opened at the southern end of Millgate near the bridge over the Devon.

Ref. 40237
Caption For Bangor, 1897

For most of the century there had been daily steamers from Belfast to Bangor, and as the holiday traffic increased the County Down Railway took over the service.

Caption For Bridport, East Bridge 1897

East Bridge, at the eastern end of East Street (left), was built by J and T Gale in 1784 and has been widened.

Caption For Chippenham, The Weir C1960

From the town bridge, we can see the sluice gates in a lowered position.

Caption For Broadstone, The Broadway C1960

The railway bridge is at the far end.

Caption For Stamford, St Mary's Church 1922

The tower and spire of St Mary's church dominates the view.

Caption For Petersfield, Market Square 1898

Prior to this, the Old Town Hall (1780), the offices of The Hampshire Post and Pince's School obscured the view of St Peter's from the Square.

Caption For Great Yarmouth, Town Hall 1891

Prior to the opening of the railways, considerable quantities of goods for Norwich and the villages along the way were sent up- river from Great Yarmouth.

Caption For Gisburn, Main Street 1921

The name of the village had an 'e' on the end until the railway company put up their sign spelt 'Gisburn', and the 'e' was forgotten.

Caption For Runcorn, Top Locks C1955

Top Locks was the end of the Bridgewater Canal system - it had come all the way from Manchester and Worsley.

Caption For Sheet, The Old Cooper Built Door 2004

Indeed, the coaching record from Liphook to Petersfield, albeit set in the 1800s, was 23 minutes, and the Regulator coach held the London to Portsmouth unbeaten record of nine hours.

Caption For Market Harborough, The Grand Union Canal C1965

The canal was built here in 1808-14, and a narrowboat trip through the ten locks would take about an hour.

Caption For Glasgow, The Necropolis 1890

These gates were known as ports and were called the Stable Green Port (north), the Gallowgate Port (east), Brig Port (south) and Trongate Port (west).

Caption For Glasgow, Green, Playground Of The East End 2004

These gates were known as ports and were called the Stable Green Port (north), the Gallowgate Port (east), Brig Port (south) and Trongate Port (west).

Caption For St Neots, Poppyfields 2005

Some of the most notable developments of the new millennium have taken place at the Eynesbury end of the town.

Caption For Enfield, The Rose And Crown, Clay Hill C1955

The ground floor comprised a hall, a parlour, a buttery and a kitchen.

Caption For Barry Docks, 1899

No 1 Dock, covering 73 acres of deep water, opened in 1889 and was equipped with nineteen coal hoists.

Caption For Enfield, Hilly Fields C1955

The ground floor comprised a hall, a parlour, a buttery and a kitchen.

Caption For Boston, Anderson's Feather Factory, Trinity Street 2005

Plans are also under way for economic developments that should benefit the privately owned port of Boston and the people and businesses dependent on it.

Caption For Market Harborough, Wooden Bridge 1922

Just a plain wooden bridge, but it was a bridge such as this upon which Edward Thomas stood in 1915 when for a few moments he imagined himself to linger between the past and the future, or between life

Caption For Newark, Castle And Bridge 1923

We are looking downstream from the lock towards a bridge over the river by-pass channel.

Caption For Middlesbrough, The Transporter Bridge C1965

The Transporter Bridge was opened on 17 October 1911 by Prince Arthur of Connaught, whose father had opened Albert Park in 1868.

Caption For Henley On Thames, Bridge 1890

Records indicate that there has been a bridge spanning the Thames at Henley since 1234.