Places
3 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
68 photos found. Showing results 2,021 to 68.
Maps
12 maps found.
Books
15 books found. Showing results 2,425 to 15.
Memories
7,548 memories found. Showing results 1,011 to 1,020.
Fond Memories Of Old Friends In Nairn
My wife Carol was a Highland lassie by birth and when we split up she left Leeds. She lived at Trades Park and eventualy married again up there. I visited Nairn a lot on trips to see my four kids, it was an 800 ...Read more
A memory of Nairn in 1987 by
Tinshill Crescent
I was born in 1951 at Tinshill Crescent. I had an older brother Rodney (b 1946). I attended old Cookridge School (as previously described by Paul Leavett). It also had 2 prefab classrooms as well as the wooden hut. I remember one ...Read more
A memory of Cookridge in 1956 by
Molly Keeler
Myself and my 2 sisters and my brother lived in cottages at Hall Road near Aldborough Hall. We all use to walk all the way to Aldborough School in all weathers. My brother's name was Alan and my sisters' names were Ann and ...Read more
A memory of Aldborough in 1930 by
Neolith
This was around 1968 and I lived in 21 Millfield Lane. I got auld Mrs Bradney's downstairs flat and me Nanna lived in No. 25, so nice and handy to pop in for a cuppa and a chat as me Ma 'n Da 'n two sisters had moved to Pegswood, Morpeth, ...Read more
A memory of Newburn in 1968 by
Growing Up In Woolton
My family from many generations back have liven in Woolton and Gateacre. I grew up in a house opposite the English Rose pub and went to Out Lane primary school. We spent our summer days playing in the orchard by Watergate Lane, ...Read more
A memory of Woolton by
My Favourite Place (God's Country)! Ystrad Mynach & Hengoed.
My most vivid memory of Hengoed Viaduct was when I travelled by train over the viaduct (Hengoed High Level) to Stoke on Trent in the summer of 1961. The whole family went and we stayed at my ...Read more
A memory of Hengoed by
1967 To 1968 Al Forrest
I was on H&R working on the old Shackletons. We did a detachment to Aden where we were the back up aircraft for 42 sqdn who were in Majunga at that time doing the airborne blockade of Rhodesia as Smith had declared UDI.
A memory of Mawgan Porth by
Purfleet Primary School
I started at Purfleet Infants & Primary School aged 4, I put my head on the desk and cried for ages, but there was a lovely elderly lady teacher (I can't remember her name?), she blew my nose and washed my face, I'd ...Read more
A memory of Purfleet in 1952 by
My Ancestors The Ormes
Just found out my grandad was born in Derby and lived at 45 Colville Street with 8 other siblings. Joseph the father worked at Midlands Railway as a wireman. Violet and Blanc worked as weavers. My grandad Bernard enlisted in ...Read more
A memory of Mickleover in 1890 by
Safe Fun In Childhood
I was born in 1962 in my family home, number 36 (now 116) Hammonds Place. It's not so common these days to be born at home. There was a community spirit on the estate, all the kids addressed adults as auntie or uncle or Mr/Mrs, ...Read more
A memory of Gobowen by
Captions
2,501 captions found. Showing results 2,425 to 2,448.
Records of an iron and wire works here go back to the 16th century, and production continued until around the end the 19th century.
Across the A3, Puttenham village lies just south of the narrow chalk ridge of the Hog's Back.
Records of the existence of this street go back at least to the 15th century and it is known to have been used by travellers and pilgrims on their way to the Abbey.
One of these very similar views shows the town on a bright summer day with the road thronged with vehicles and the pavements, benches and sea wall busy with visitors enjoying the Cheshire sunshine and
In 1907 the Corporation cut a new thoroughfare across Newgate, demolishing the Circus and the old Hippodrome and linking Blackwater Street with the Esplanade.
Walton-on-Thames is another suburbanised town south-west of London along the River Thames.
This lovely building is at the southern end of the High Street, in the former market place where the High Street meets Worcester Road and St John`s Street.
The T-junction and the church are just ahead. Whalley had an abbey once, and that fact distracts from the importance of the church here.
The creeper-clad Dinorben Arms Hotel (left) and the Eleth Hotel provided good quality accommodation in the 1930s.
Horley is now firmly back in Surrey, but for some years prior to 1974 it, along with Gatwick Airport, was within Sussex.
Churchtown can trace its recorded history back to the Viking landings, but it is also true that the settlement will have been in existence before the outcasts from Ireland made their way ashore.
These opposing views of the town centre illustrate the character and quality of life in Aspley Guise.
We are looking back from Bath Square, with the General Post Office on the right.
Swindon - 'swine down' or 'pig hill' - is Wiltshire's largest settlement; it grew from the two villages of Old and New Swindon of about 2,000 inhabitants in 1900 to its present size of about
Performing daily at 3.30pm and 7.30pm were the Pier Pierrots.
There are records of millers in Neston dating back to 1672, and the Mostyn Estate map of 1814 indicates two windmills in the area, but one was demolished in 1822 following severe storm damage.
Back in the new city of Milton Keynes, Simpson is one of the villages it engulfed; but it is conserved within its boundaries.
William Morris described Bibury as the most beautiful village in England, and it has charmed visitors throughout the ages with its quintessential Cotswold character and composition.
The shops behind the big lamp in the centre of the road are interesting.
The village shop (centre) does a good trade in cycle parts, but at certain times in the religious calendar, pilgrims arrive on foot from all over Europe.
In front of St Oswald's Church, the old market cross and bullring provide a central point for the delightful village of Askrigg.
17th- and 18th-century houses and cottages make Coxwold a delight to the eye.
Below, a shingle beach with patches of pea-grit provides a spot for rest and relaxation between Raffey's Ledge and the Mouth Rocks, where the River Char enters the sea.
The wide sweep of cobbles and double avenue of trees defines this characteristic view on entering the town from the west.
Places (3)
Photos (68)
Memories (7548)
Books (15)
Maps (12)