Caister On Sea, Holiday Camp Roller Skating Rink c.1955
Photo ref: C450012
Made in Britain logo

More about this scene

A few stalwart holidaymakers are enjoying the giddy sport of roller-skating on the holiday camp rink. Some go gingerly round in pairs in an effort to keep their feet. It looks like it is a cold day, for the spectators are wearing their overcoats.

An extract from Norfolk Photographic Memories.

Featuring this image:

This image appears in the Theme:

50s & 60s

Favourite archive photos celebrating the 50s & 60s

Norfolk Photographic Memories

Norfolk Photographic Memories

The photo 'Caister-on-Sea, Holiday Camp Roller Skating Rink c1955' appears in this book.

View Book

A Selection of Memories from Caister-on-Sea

For many years now, we've been inviting visitors to our website to add their own memories to share their experiences of life as it was, prompted by the photographs in our archive. Here are some from Caister-on-Sea

Sparked a Memory for you?

If this has sparked a memory, why not share it here?

Hi everyone! I’m hoping someone might have old photos from Caister Holiday Park in 1987, back when it was owned by Ladbroke. I went there with my mum and brother for my very first holiday — I was 5 at the time — and although Mum didn’t take any pictures, I’ve never forgotten it. I remember: • A kids playground built like a fortress right by the ...see more
This is the plane I had my first flight in during the 1950s. My father had done some work for the owner/pilot , so as a reward we had a flight along the coast, I remember the pilot always used to dive bomb a large dune near where Caister Holiday Camp is .
During the summer of 1979 I worked at Ladbrookes Holiday Centre with my friend Tina, we had a wonderful summer full of laughter, I even met my husband there, he was on holiday, 37yrs later we're still married and twice a yr we go back to scratby on holiday wonderful place wonderful memories
My father was a milkman, for Home Counties Dairy, the horses were stabled in Hodeson road, the bottling dairy was opposite the Eardley arms pub. The livery was green, and the trade mark a gold triangle. Milk then was in glass pint and half pint bottles with cardboard caps. They also sold small items beside milk.