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Photos
12 photos found. Showing results 181 to 12.
Maps
9,582 maps found.
Books
29 books found. Showing results 217 to 240.
Memories
4,582 memories found. Showing results 91 to 100.
The Start Of A Wonderful Marriage
My wife and I married here on the 17th Feb 1977 and we've not regretted a day since. It poured with rain going in but the sun shone coming out. That has just about summed things up for us. The Rev Wood and Rev Carr ...Read more
A memory of Saltash by
St.Matthias Youth Club 1950s
I was born in December 1939 in Redhill Hospital which then changed to Edgware General. My parents Bill and Gladys Wyness lived in Marlow Court, Colindeep Lane and my maternal grandparents lived in Chalfont Court also in ...Read more
A memory of Colindale by
Lady Neville Recreation Ground
I played here from 1970 onwards. Behind the building were the public loos. To the left of the building, and to the left of the entrance off Avenue Road was a hump, about 4 feet high with a double skin brick wall ...Read more
A memory of Banstead by
Newarthill 1950/60s Tosh And I
Every now and then I reminisce and take a trip down memory lane, of my childhood days growing up in Newarthill on Burnside Rd. I remember Tosh McGarry and I going to Father Gillan's jumble sale and buying an old fox ...Read more
A memory of Newarthill by
Machine Gunned On Churston Drive By A Young German Pilot
My Aunt Joyce (born 1931) used to live on Churston Drive. She told me this morning about how she was walking to school with a friend one morning during the war when a German plane machine-gunned ...Read more
A memory of Morden by
Good Times
I lived at 14 oak street Chapel of Ease. I can remember the two estates being built and the bridge in the photo is also the way I went to school at the west end primary school. The red phone box is still there I believe, in the photo the ...Read more
A memory of Abercarn by
Big Strong Men Of Coal And Dust
As with many of the neighbors in our road we owned two coal fires, one in each downstairs room, with chimneys to match. Keeping the fires lit during cold winters required loose coal, supplied in huge bags, to be ...Read more
A memory of Bexleyheath by
Evacuee
My name was Evelyn Smith "Eve". I was evacuated to my uncle and aunt's home during the war. My uncle was Sidney Smith - he was station master. We lived at 3 Coombe Lea. Miss Richardson was our school teacher - a really beautiful ...Read more
A memory of Tipton St John in 1940 by
Walderslade Thoughts
I live in the house where I was born in Walderslade. I have a huge collection of memories as, being 64 things that linger in the memory are triggered by living in the place you grew up. Kit Hill Avenue was originally cut ...Read more
A memory of Walderslade by
Halcyon Days
I was at both the old and new Scotland Hill school, left in 72. Mr Shanks was a fearsome character, with some relief when he retired. I use to go to Mrs Huddles house occasionally as she lived in forest end. Kind lady. Mrs ...Read more
A memory of Little Sandhurst by
Captions
1,673 captions found. Showing results 217 to 240.
Another fine view, this time taken at high tide. The river washes the quayside above the bridge. The Church of St Peter dominates the scene.
Here we see North's House (centre), and Polly Miller's (left) - both named after fondly remembered former
Another picture of St Faith's Church, taken six years after the previous photograph. The trees have grown and the whole scene looks more rural.
Another glimpse of the region's industrial heritage. Note the extensive mine-workings and the railway trucks in the foreground.
Another view of the Spa buildings, this time from Promenade level. There is no record of why the huge banners proclaiming Queen Victoria are displayed.
Great Yarmouth has two piers, Wellington and Britannia, both built in the 1850s. The Britannia Pier is at the northern end of Marine Parade, the main seafront thoroughfare.
Another turn-of-the-century view of Newland Street, looking towards the Collingwood Road junction, bustling with pedestrians.A few onlookers, including two dogs, watch the photographer at work.
Both villages feature many delightful stone and timber houses.
Another view of the pool, this time looking the other way, showing the rocky shore with the town in the background.
Another view, this time looking south along the beach towards Carrickfergus. Belfast Lough is on the left, and the hotel and refreshment room are on the right.
This is another view from the same road that passes through Hucclecote to Barnwood, but before the advent of fast cars and lorries. The avenue still remains.
Here we see another view of this superb building, this time showing a more expansive view of the gardens and tennis court.
A short flight in this light aircraft, even just a few hundred feet up, would give the sightseeing holidaymaker a marvellous view of both the coastline and the Broads inland.
Here we see another view of the Wye valley. Again, trees and attractive small fields give a vivid impression of the glorious nature of the Derbyshire Peak District.
Here we see another view of the long, straggling street with its delightful half-timbered cottages and the brick Baptist Chapel on the opposite side of the road.
Another view of Derwent Terrace and the Promenade. This shows the Jubilee Bridge crossing the Derwent - the bridge was erected to mark the jubilee of Queen Victoria's reign.
The granite stone of Bodmin Moor supports a natural oddity, the impressive outcrop known as the Cheesewring (another name for a cheese press).
The building on the right was later replaced by another. The gap leading off to the right between the buildings is Back Lane.
Another view showing the popularity of Saltburn as a holiday resort in the years which followed the end of the Second World War, but before the advent of the affordable package
Both Birkenhead and Wallasey Corporations operated their own tramway systems. Birkenhead's was electrified in 1901 and ran until 1937; Wallasey's operated from 1902 to 1933.
Note the impressive chimneys, both on the side and in the centre of the building.
Another view of the cathedral. Behind the cathedral, the Necropolis can be seen, stretching from the left and to the right of the photograph.
Another evocative view of the Medway, this time looking downstream round the meander bend. The quiet scene belies the nearness of the industrial town.
Along here were branches of both national and Cheshire retailers including Dewhurst, the butchers, and Waterworths.
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