Places
21 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Bush Hill Park, Greater London
- Bush Hill, Greater London
- Bush, Grampian (near Laurencekirk)
- Bush, Cornwall (near Stratton)
- Bush End, Essex
- Bush Estate, Norfolk
- Lower Bush, Kent
- Holly Bush, Clwyd
- Latton Bush, Essex
- Bush Green, Suffolk
- Shepherd's Bush, Greater London
- Round Bush, Hertfordshire
- Gernon Bushes, Essex
- Peckham Bush, Kent
- Cloudesley Bush, Warwickshire
- Upper Bush, Kent
- Threshers Bush, Essex
- Bush Bank, Hereford & Worcester
- Beggars Bush, Sussex (near Worthing)
- Bush Green, Norfolk (near Attleborough)
- Bush Green, Norfolk (near Harleston)
Photos
54 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
105 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
348 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Bush House Open Air School
I also attended bush house open air school not sure how many years maybe one or two think I left around 1959 - 1961. I think my teacher was Miss Williams - I remember all the teachers names you have mentioned but only ...Read more
A memory of Isleworth by
Days Of My Childhood
As young children my nanna would frequently walk my sister and I up to the Arno to play in the rough ground behind the rose garden. That was way back in the 1950's. She would sit and spend quiet time in the gardens whilst we ...Read more
A memory of Birkenhead by
Happy Days
I went to Wescott Road school in 1950 then St Crispins 1956. I can recall quite a few shops. Herrings furniture where you could buy on HP with no checks, as Mr Herring assessed whether or not you looked trustworthy. NSS newsagents. Next ...Read more
A memory of Wokingham by
Stanmore 1950 52
Hallo , my name is Cliff Bowley. My family moved to Stanmore in 1950 to a very large house called "Belmont Lodge " on the corner of Denis Lane and London Road junction. Does anybody remember it? It was knocked down for development, ...Read more
A memory of Stanmore by
Living In Teddington 1950s To 1980s
We moved from 76 Princes Road in 1957 to the other end of Teddington, to 143 High Street, opposite Kingston Lane. My parents bought the house for about £1400 (yes fourteen hundred) as a refurb project. It still had ...Read more
A memory of Teddington
Little Waltham
I was born in Little Waltham and lived there until 1967. I only left because I got married and the cost of housing in the village, even then, was way out of our reach, so we had to move 20 miles north to Sible Hedingham. I had a ...Read more
A memory of Little Waltham by
A Privilege To Grow Up Here!
I was born in 1961 in Thorpe Combe hospital in Walthamstow and brought up by my parents in Forest Edge Buckhurst Hill. I consider myself very privileged to have lived there for the first 26 years of my life and have ...Read more
A memory of Buckhurst Hill by
New Moon Café
I’m researching the New Moon Café, The Street, Cobham. It was opposite The Little White Lion. It was owned by Bob and Lottie Bush during the war. My great-great grandmother Katherine Overington and my great-grandmother Ivy Cattermole ...Read more
A memory of Cobham by
Revisit To My Home
February was a very sad time for all my family. There was a light at the end of a very sad day. My youngest son took me to Wednesbury, Old Park Rd, Dudley, and my home 5 Wells Rd. The day was brilliant, parked right outside my ...Read more
A memory of Bilston by
Hornchurch, Wingletye Lane, Photograph C.1950
I lived in Glanville Drive, a residential road off Upminster Road about 100 yards to the west of Wingletye Lane, for the first part of my life from 1947 so I knew the area well. The building on the ...Read more
A memory of Hornchurch by
Captions
59 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
The pub is called the Old Bush Inn.
Here we see newer housing in a location on top of the Downs, amongst gorse bushes.
There are at least three children peering from the bushes by the water.
On the right, hidden by bushes, is West Bank; further down West Deyne protrudes.
Under this neatly-trimmed ivy and bushes is the entrance lodge to Sandringham House and gardens, which were subsequently opened to the public in the early 1900s.
Away from the traffic and not too near the lake edge, the trees, the bushes and the grassy slopes make it an ideal area for watching bird and other types of wildlife.
Londis, the grocers, now occupies the area of bushes to its right.
Today they would be seen through a dense screen of bushes and trees.
The lane to the right leads to Gosmore, and at the top of the hill in front of us, hidden by the bushes, is the Moorhens public house.
A view of the main regatta course is obscured by the bush in the foreground, but there is much other activity to please the eye.
Today the grass and beds full of flowers have been replaced by paving stones and beds with bushes planted in them instead - all very much easier to maintain.
Note the Bush Hotel on the right (no longer trading).
The lady with the pram, near the clipped bushes (left), is outside the Post Office and Stores, which closed in 1975, although the post box remains.
Not much more than a stone's throw from Jack Straw's Castle, the original Old Bull and Bush can be seen on the right of shot.
Note the ornate machicolations adorning the tops of the gatehouse towers; there were also gun-ports at the base of the walls, obscured by bushes in this photograph.
The cottages beside the Nonconformist chapel - now the village's United Reformed Church - have hardly altered, but there is no trace of the cricket pitch, as the site is now covered with trees and bushes
This public park, with its neatly-trimmed shrubs and bushes, occupies the former site of the vineyard of the Benedictine monastery founded in 1082 by Bishop Gundulf.
A sextet of non-commissioned officers from the 2nd Infantry Brigade adopt a casual pose for the photographer amid the gorse bushes and sparse clumps of grass outside the Sergeants Mess at this camp on
The cottages on the left of this photograph have all gone now, and in their place is a landscaped public garden area with trees and bushes.
The Bush Inn, half a mile from the church, still stands, but now has a slate roof after the thatch was destroyed in a fire in 1968.
Here he wrote down 'Bushes and Briars', which he heard sung by villagers.
In 1890 it would appear that fields immediately next to the castle were grazed, whereas today the fields to the right and foreground around the castle are covered with trees, bushes and undergrowth
The businesses on the left have all gone, but Barclays Bank, the impressive building on the right, and Lloyds Bank farther up the High Street remain in the town - although Lloyds has moved
On two acres of Whin Common, to the north, the poor were once permitted to collect gorse bushes as firewood.
Places (21)
Photos (54)
Memories (348)
Books (0)
Maps (105)