Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Ellesmere Port, Cheshire
- Burry Port, Dyfed
- Port Talbot, West Glamorgan
- Neath, West Glamorgan
- Briton Ferry, West Glamorgan
- Resolven, West Glamorgan
- Skewen, West Glamorgan
- Port Glasgow, Strathclyde
- Pyle, West Glamorgan
- Port-en-Bessin, France
- Port of Ness, Western Isles
- Crynant, West Glamorgan (near Resolven)
- Port Askaig, Strathclyde
- Port Ellen, Strathclyde
- Port Charlotte, Strathclyde
- Port Wemyss, Strathclyde
- Port Said, Egypt
- Cockenzie and Port Seton, Lothian
- Laleston, West Glamorgan
- Seven Sisters, West Glamorgan
- Tonna, West Glamorgan
- Port Isaac, Cornwall
- Port-Eynon, West Glamorgan
- Port Erin, Isle of Man
- Port Sunlight, Merseyside
- Port Gaverne, Cornwall
- Margam, West Glamorgan (near Port Talbot)
- Port St Mary, Isle of Man
- Port Quin, Cornwall
- Port Navas, Cornwall
- Glyn-neath, West Glamorgan
- Aberavon, West Glamorgan
- Port Appin, Strathclyde
- Port Bannatyne, Strathclyde
- Port Soderick, Isle of Man
- Milborne Port, Somerset
Photos
1,275 photos found. Showing results 181 to 200.
Maps
711 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 217 to 4.
Memories
301 memories found. Showing results 91 to 100.
Former Landlord
Whilst doing our family history, we discover that the Andrews family were former proprietors of The Kings Head in Milborne Port. His name was Frederick James Andrews and his wife Annie. His son, Frederick Elisha Andrews ...Read more
A memory of Milborne Port in 1890 by
Port Regis White Street Sign
While on Google Earth 2 days ago I looked at the white signpost on the driveway of Port Regis, it still looks the same as the first time I saw it in the 1960s. Today it says 'Nursing Home', but it still looks the same along with the white fence, for me like looking back in time.
A memory of Broadstairs in 1963 by
Wonderful Childhood
I lived in Crib-y-mor with my grandmother, Emily Roberts, and my mother Patricia Jones (both originally Williamson). I lived opposite Tom Roberts and at an early age developed my own system of visiting everyone. First I ...Read more
A memory of Llanbedrog in 1959 by
Tom Lizzie Cook
1948 - onwards. My Mother and her two cousins were brought up by their Aunt and Uncle as above and I spent all my childhood holidays with them. Great Aunt Liz was well known for her teas for visitors and ramblers from CHA Porlock. ...Read more
A memory of Culbone in 1948 by
Port Regis
My sister and I were both at Port Regis for Delicate Girls between 1957 -9 approx. Various memories (good & bad). Very hard to find a site that is just for this convent. Seems to split between a Broadstairs site. Various names crop up but none that I recognise.
A memory of Broadstairs in 1957 by
Frenchay Hospital, Bristol Built By The American Army
Frenchay Hospital in Bristol was built by the American Army during the Second World War. Frenchay Hospital is a large hospital situated in Frenchay, South Gloucestershire, on the (NE) outskirts ...Read more
A memory of Frenchay by
Campsite
As a family we used to go camping at Laleham every weekend, spring to autumn. This was from about 1950 until the mid 1960s. It was an amazing time, like most childhood memories. My nan and grandad were the Greenland family and they had ...Read more
A memory of Laleham in 1955 by
The Bank Chippy Bell Street
My friend lived at the Queens Head pub shown in the Bell Street photo, when we were cold and hungry we used to go to the Bank Chip shop (just out of shot at the top right of the picture, on the curve of the road ...Read more
A memory of Wigston in 1971 by
Arthur Shackson And His Wife Gertie With Their Son Arthur.
This is my Uncle and Aunt and cousin Arthur, outside their cottage no. 32 North Hill in Clovelly village. They lived there for many years and took in many many people for B&B, people ...Read more
A memory of Clovelly by
Bognor Briefly!
My parents George and Phyllis Stroud ran the Hotham Club in Waterloo Square - now the HQ of the RAFA Bognor branch. After National Service I worked first for Lec Refrigeration as a welder and then as a porter at the War Memorial ...Read more
A memory of Bognor Regis in 1960 by
Captions
782 captions found. Showing results 217 to 240.
Here we see the 'Finland' in Number 6 Dry Dock.The vessel was not a regular visitor to the port, and could have been here on charter.
The town grew up astride what was the most important road in medieval England, that between London and Chester, at that time the principal port for Ireland.
Penny Bridge over the River Crake was a creek port under the control of Lancaster; there was a quay by the bridge.
Following the Norman invasion of 1066, Southampton became a key port, and the walls and other buildings are a permanent reminder of Southampton's wealth and prosperity in those days.
The vessel was not a regular visitor to the port, and could have been here on charter.
It was the arrival of the railway that sounded the death knell for the old port of Haverfordwest.
By the time of this photograph tourism is taking over from the traditional port activities of fishing and trading, and there are one or two pleasure motor boats moored in the harbour.
This photograph was taken in pre-breakwater days; Goodwick is now the port from which the Irish ferry service operates.
In this they were aided by Port Isaac's maze of narrow streets, or 'drangs', in which they could run the excise men ragged, communicating by a series of coded knocks on the walls of adjoining houses.
A steamer rides at anchor awaiting a tug to take her into Hull, while another is just about to enter the port complex.
What makes the Wet Dock so useful is that it is a non-tidal section of the port.
Sixty years on, Beccles has declined as a port, with goods being carried more by road.
A sleepy village now, in medieval times Blakeney was one of the top ten ports in England.
Cley (rhymes with sky), once a busy port, is now a sleepy village, where nothing much has changed since this photograph was taken.
At the time this photograph was taken, Ulverston was still a busy commercial port linked to the River Leven by the mile-long Ulverston Canal, England's shortest.
Poole continues to function as a port, though as much now for leisure craft as merchant shipping.
After Weymouth harbour was dredged and improved during Victoria's reign, larger ships joined the trade routes between the town and foreign ports.
For centuries it thrived as a fishing port, but it lost out with the rise of nearby Newlyn in the 19th century.
Paddle steamers provided pleasure trips and a bus service of sorts out to the coastal ports of Harwich and Felixstowe.
this beach, as documented by Giraldus Cambrensis: 'We then passed over Niwegal sands, at which place (during the winter that King Henry II spent in Ireland), as well as in almost all other western ports
Dartmouth was once one of England's greatest ports, exporting wool and cloth.
It is hard to believe now, but East Budleigh was a port before the river Otter silted up around the sixteenth century.
Salcombe is a small port at the mouth of the Kingsbridge estuary.
Once the port for Canterbury, Fordwich was a town when Domesday was compiled.
Places (172)
Photos (1275)
Memories (301)
Books (4)
Maps (711)