Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chandler's Ford, Hampshire
- Ford, Northumberland
- Forde Abbey, Dorset
- Ford, Wiltshire (near Chippenham)
- Ford, Sussex (near Littlehampton)
- Ford, Wiltshire (near Salisbury)
- Ford, Staffordshire
- Ford, Devon (near Ivybridge)
- Ford, Derbyshire
- Ford, Gloucestershire
- Ford, Kent
- Ford, Strathclyde
- Ford, Dyfed (near Puncheston)
- Ford, Devon (near Bideford)
- Ford, Devon (near Salcombe)
- Ford, Shropshire
- Ford, Somerset (near Midsomer Norton)
- Ford, Devon (near Plymouth)
- Ford, Merseyside
- Ford, Buckinghamshire
- Ford, Hereford & Worcester
- Ford, Somerset (near Wiveliscombe)
- Ford, Devon (near Axminster)
- Broad Ford, Kent
- Hadham Ford, Hertfordshire
- Ford's Green, Suffolk
- Ford Street, Somerset
- Gozzard's Ford, Oxfordshire
- Combs Ford, Suffolk
- Kentisbury Ford, Devon
- Ford Forge, Northumberland
- Ford's Green, Sussex
- Eaton Ford, Cambridgeshire
- Ford Green, Lancashire
- Slippery Ford, Yorkshire
- Oakshaw Ford, Cumbria
Photos
378 photos found. Showing results 181 to 200.
Maps
346 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 217 to 1.
Memories
424 memories found. Showing results 91 to 100.
Wroughton From 1954ish
My parents moved from East London to Swindon and then to Wroughton in 1954. My parents were Pat and Geoff Leach. I am Janet (Leach - now Ford) and my sister penny was born in the maternity hospital in Swindon in 1958. My ...Read more
A memory of Wroughton
Pick Fords Chimney
Many people assume the P H on the chimney was painted on This is not correct the letters were made of fully glazed white bricks these bricks had also been used in the toilet / showers and wash room I worked there as an electrician ...Read more
A memory of Crook by
Dancing Classes At The Alhambra Palace
I used to go to Bob Dale's ballroom dancing classes. That would have been around 1956-1959 when I was 13-15 years old. I loved it there and, of course, fell in love with him! If was thrilled in later years when ...Read more
A memory of Droylsden
Always My Home
I was born and grew up in Kelsale. We lived at Rectory Cottages, my brother Perry and my parents, Pam and Aubrey Mann. My grandparents lived at Carlton and the family go back in both church registers to the 1600s. I loved reading ...Read more
A memory of Kelsale by
The Blaksmiths Shop
The doors next to the Gladstone arms was the blacksmiths shop this is were i had to leave my bike when i went to combs ford school 1947 to 1953.Mr Stamers was the blacksmith he lived next door.
A memory of Stowmarket by
Wonderful Feelings
My mother was born in Leeds and most years we would spend some time there. I came to love Leeds; such a vibrant place compared to Lincoln where we lived. This picture evokes a lot of feeling. From the V J celebrations in 1945 ...Read more
A memory of Leeds in 1945 by
Playing Football
I remember the person who broke his leg that day was Bernie Lowe as I was playing for the team Hound United against Netley FC on that pitch. I also remember your father as I played for them for a season with I think your brother ...Read more
A memory of Netley by
Up The Overs
Walking free through the wet grass leaving dark trails. Ahead the meadow rises to the mill bank where we stand in silence. Silent and smooth the deep mill race slides towards the wheel. Turning away we follow the bank upstream to ...Read more
A memory of Kempston in 1950 by
The Jetty, River Plant
January 1977. The rain was almost horizontal that day, ice cold too, as I walked towards the hut at the delivery wharf of the Ford River Plant in Dagenham, Essex, I thought to myself that it really could not be any worse ...Read more
A memory of Dagenham in 1977 by
Astwood Bank Co Op......Remember It?
It was so interesting to find a few photos of old Astwood Bank on here. I moved to the village when my mother married my step father, Jesse Bradley, in 1964. We lived at 21 High Street and I got a job at the ...Read more
A memory of Astwood Bank in 1969 by
Captions
248 captions found. Showing results 217 to 240.
The site of the Parish Church was a natural centre for a settlement, on raised ground overlooking the ancient ford over the Mersey.
Just in front of the Star is Haywards Heath's town sign, attractively painted and prominently positioned for all to see and enjoy.
The first recorded wooden bridge was built here on the site of the original ford in the early 12th century.
Originally High Street, its approach from the ford across the Roach was via Bull Brow.
Ribchester was once a Roman fort (Bremetennacum), and it was situated by an important ford of the River Ribble.
Ribchester was once a Roman fort (Bremetennacum), and it was situated by an important ford of the River Ribble.
She had either just been, or was about to be sold to Nathaniel Miller for his Preston-Dublin service.
One was the gap between the Blackdown and Brendon Hills, and the other was the coastal route, which used the old ford at Axmouth; this was part of the Roman Fosse Way, which ran all the way to Lincoln.
A nice 1920 Ford Model T stands outside the tobacconist (left), and the lady in the foreground prepares to rest her bicycle against a cast iron gas lamp standard.
The Post Office bought it for their use and moved from King Street in 1919.
It was a ford which fixed the site of Belfast, but not long after the town was begun, a bridge crossed the river.
Despite the fact that they were supposed to be on the same side when it came to defending the Borders, the Herons of Ford and the Manners of Etal did not always see eye-to-eye.
The Ford Thames van bears a DD Gloucestershire registration; behind it we can just see the back of the latest Thames van which superseded it.
A Ford Consul heads out of Fareham.
The Ford Thames van bears a DD Gloucestershire registration; behind it we can just see the back of the latest Thames van which superseded it.
Ford, Morris, Hillman and Triumph - all the big automobile names are represented here as the town becomes accustomed to the motor age.
Note the shop frontage for Stephen and Fred Green on the left (now a chartered accountants).
Then came fords: cutting the banks to widen rivers makes them shallow enough to drive or walk across.
westwards up West Street to the Town Hall (left of centre), a Ford Model T passes the shops of Best, Warren and Spiller (right).
The shops behind the `sit up and beg` Ford and the Sunbeam Talbot 90 are occupied by Barnardos and Taylor`s the estate agents, while the whole of Fosters, outfitters, and the shop next door
Hertfordshire puddingstone is a naturally forming conglomerate of well-rounded gravel in a cement-like matrix.
The Latin words 'parva' and 'magna' for little and great were anciently applied to many Fylde villages (Carleton, Bispham, Thornton and Poulton are all examples).
Upstream, a few hundred yards before the river reaches the churchyard, the ford over the river is jealously guarded by the village ducks, geese and swans, who challenge pedestrians and motorists; usually
To save time, and money, Hugh de Cressingham, Edward I's Treasurer, had stopped Surrey exploiting a ford that would have allowed him to bring his heavy horse across the river and hit Wallace in the flank
Places (47)
Photos (378)
Memories (424)
Books (1)
Maps (346)