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Maps
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163 books found. Showing results 2,377 to 2,400.
Memories
22,912 memories found. Showing results 991 to 1,000.
Working At Litton Mill
I went to work at Litton Mill when I was seventeen. Worked in the Sizing, Charlie Mellor was the supervisor. I met many lovely people and a great lot of characters. The sizing was machines with huge rollers set in a bed of ...Read more
A memory of Litton Mill by
My Racing Days.
At the age of 16 I arrived at Druids Lodge to become an apprentice jockey, signed to the trainer Noel Cannon. I had never sat on a horse, having come from the East End of London, but being only 5st 12lb my aspirations were high. ...Read more
A memory of Druid's Lodge in 1957
Curls
I originally remember the (now) Debenhams being a bomb site on which cars were parked, then a new department store was built called Curls. The top floor boasted a verandah restaurant where, if I was good whilst out shopping, my mum would take ...Read more
A memory of Norwich by
Jenny Lind Hospital
I was admitted to this children's hospital in the winter of 1961 aged 5 years, with acute asthma. I remember clearly a green bathroom with lots of hot water pipes and being bathed twice in a morning as I daren`t tell the second ...Read more
A memory of Norwich by
The Old Coop Funeral Parlour Lugsdale Road
Can anyone remember if the funeral parlour was sited were the coop used to have its repair shop in Lugsdale Road? I can remember the repair shop, I did work at the CAB in the 80s, which used that site before it moved further along the building, above was the old theatre/cinema which I have seen.
A memory of Widnes by
Brantwood Oval
I was born 1966 and grew up on an estate (cant remember the name) and lived in Brantwood Oval, just off Haworth Road. My dad's family all lived close by. I remember picking bluebells and searching for frog spawn and getting fish and ...Read more
A memory of Bradford by
Looking For My Father
My name is Dawn Louise Elsie Cammock, I was born at Thorpe Maternity Hospital in Easington in 1964. My mother's name is Mavis Cammock - she had 2 sisters Eva and Dawn. Her mother's name was Elsie Cammock and her father was ...Read more
A memory of Wingate in 1964 by
Stocks Hill.
Known as Stocks Hill, on the left of the photo is the Coop Drapery Shop. At the side of the shop was an alley and the Coop Bakery was there. The house facing in the picture was Ted Witneys car repair yard, along High Street was Keffords ...Read more
A memory of Moulton in 1950 by
Memories Of Padiham
I was born in 1947 to Betsy and Leonard Mcgough on Railway Terrace, which I believe is now called Russell Terrace. My mother worked in the cotton mills all her life and retired in a mill at Read. We moved to Moor Lane where we ...Read more
A memory of Whalley in 1957 by
Evacuation
I lived in Brook Bungalow between Latchingdon and Althorne during the war years and visited grandparents there into the 50's. I remember Barbie and Alec, the Mathams and the Plumbs (who ran the local garage) with such affection and ...Read more
A memory of Latchingdon in 1940 by
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 2,377 to 2,400.
On the corner of Kings Mill Lane, some timber-framed cottages are built gable-end to the street.
This view shows Eype in the days before it was invaded by caravans and too many vehicles, though, as can be seen by the parked cars, some people had already discovered the delights of the beach at Eype
At the bottom of West Street lies the 15th-century Spread Eagle Hotel, one of the most famous inns in Sussex.
Milford on Sea's church, along with the one at Brockenhurst, was a survivor of the forest clearances and receives a mention in the Domesday Book.
By the time this picture was taken, Salter Brothers steamboats were well established on the river Thames, operating from their base at Folly Bridge.
David I built a manor at Linlithgow, and next to it a church dedicated to St Michael. In 1301 Edward Longshanks set about rebuilding and heavily fortifying the palace.
Pronounced 'clibbery', Cleobury Mortimer is famous for the crooked spire of its church.
The first 'cricket week' at the College ground (it was not called a festival until 1906) was organised by James Lillywhite, the College coach, in 1878, and cost £120 to stage.
Lose Hill, at 1,563ft, is the eastern extremity of a fine ridge which runs from Mam Tor.
Travelling north along the straight road from Brockenhurst brings the traveller to Lyndhurst, an ideal centre for exploring the northern edges of the great forest.
The ancient, ivy-covered Black Swan Hotel dominates this view of The Square at Helmsley, the attractive castle-crowned capital of the North York Moors National Park.
Cattle graze the green outside the Punch Bowl Inn at Low Row in Swaledale.
The mill pond at Ickham, on the east bank of the Little Stour, is crossed by this seemingly fragile footbridge whose supporting piles serve as a useful trap for waterweeds and other detritus before the
This photograph was taken during the heyday of mass tourism. The tea house, which still functions today as a delightful cafe-restaurant, stands at the near end of the beach.
The narrowness of the thoroughfare must have posed problems for the driver of the horse-drawn wagon seen halted outside the barn at the end.
But it is her gnarled yew trees that claim the greatest age: this huge churchyard yew is said to date back at least to the time of King Harold.
Standing at the junction of Gainsborough Road and Morland Road, the church opened in May 1962.
Sedbergh is a pleasant little market town on the southern edge of the lovely Howgill Fells.
Cloth-capped and gaitered Edwardian children stand with their father outside S Warhurst's hardware shop on a sunny day.
This view looks across to the Trowbridge Road - its strong line of Victorian and Edwardian houses is evident going into the distance.
As the housing estate at Monkton grew up, the owners of Monkton Park, the District Council, began to develop the area for recreational purposes.
These premises were on Market Hill at the top of George Street, opposite the old Corn Exchange. They made way for Debenhams in 1978.
Situated on the high road between Cowes and Ryde, Binstead has views across the Solent to Spithead.
The archetypal memorial is sited at the junction of Frolesworth Road and Station Road, offering a permanent reminder of the inevitably sad consequences of war.
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