Places
18 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Hythe, Kent
- Hythe, Hampshire
- Small Hythe, Kent
- Bablock Hythe, Oxfordshire
- Methwold Hythe, Norfolk
- Hythe, Somerset
- Hythe, Surrey
- Hythe End, Berkshire
- The Hythe, Essex
- Egham Hythe, Surrey
- West Hythe, Kent
- New Hythe, Kent
- Broad Street, Kent (near Hythe)
- Horn Street, Kent (near Hythe)
- Newbarn, Kent (near Hythe)
- Newington, Kent (near Hythe)
- Broad Street, Kent (near Hythe)
- Stone Hill, Kent (near Hythe)
Photos
360 photos found. Showing results 2,041 to 360.
Maps
101 maps found.
Books
10 books found. Showing results 2,449 to 10.
Memories
4,406 memories found. Showing results 1,021 to 1,030.
Wallsend 1954 68
Born in the Green Maternity Hosp 1954, lived in Windsor Drive, Howden, Sandown Gardens, Howden and Prospect Ave. I remember being taken to the Masons Arms at Bigges Main in a pushchair, parked outside the corrugated iron lean to ...Read more
A memory of Wallsend by
Cowper Gardens
I was born in Cowper Gardens in 1946, my nan's, house No.11, where she lived until her death in 1979. My cousin was also born there and lived with her mum, Betty. I moved away in 1949 and lived in Peckham but used to spend ...Read more
A memory of Wallington in 1960 by
Of Beaches, Giant Snow Balls, Sniggery Woods And Little Crosby
I spent my infant years in Crossender Rd. In the winter we had hills nearby adjacent to the Southport to L'pool line. We used to roll little snow balls until they achieved a massive girth ...Read more
A memory of Crosby in 1955
Farm Trailers
I went to school at St Mary's down Horncastle Road and we would sit by the Maud Foster and wait for the trailers of peas to go by on their way to the canners by Bargate Bridge, then grab arms fulls of pea vines then sit and eat them at the side of the road - we always ate our veg!
A memory of Boston in 1959 by
East Harling, Audrey Hudson
I came to E.H. in 1947 when I was 2 yrs old, and lived in Gallants Lane - opposite Fen Lane. Audrey Hudson used to organize the village children for the St John's Ambulance Brigade practice evenings, when we would ...Read more
A memory of East Harling in 1955 by
My Home Town
Hi, I was born in LLay north Wales in June 1939, three weeks later we moved to Walkden. The family joke was, I was the cause of the WW2. We lived at 67 Westminster Road, just down from where the monument was originaly located. Whilst ...Read more
A memory of Walkden in 1944 by
Sadly The Palm House Has Gone
I am the current owner and restorer of the former Town Hall. It was originally called Whitehall and is now called Mossley Hall. The Palm House in the picture was removed, along with the stained glass Atrium over the ...Read more
A memory of Mossley in 1958 by
Phil & John's Amazing Journey Part 2 Football, Pubs, Old Friends
Stopping briefly outside the Working Men’s Club, the meeting place on Saturday lunchtimes for us Groby footballers before away games, we pass the chippy, the old blacksmiths where the old ...Read more
A memory of Groby in 1970
Milk Rounds
This was the year I left school. I started working for l.Standing and Sons of Hampers Farm in Station Road. They had one Ford van, five horses with various milkfloats. It was quite different for a fifteen vear old who was not really ...Read more
A memory of Horsham in 1957 by
Gods Little Corner
I first went to Streatley in 1965 where I started to court my wife whose name was Susan Adams then. We used to go for walks over Sharpenhoe Clappers and come back to the Chequers Pub and see Hilda and ...Read more
A memory of Streatley in 1966 by
Captions
4,899 captions found. Showing results 2,449 to 2,472.
A boy runs across to meet his friend by the large green on the left. Perhaps they are going to meet some more friends and play a game of tag.
Teeth were also pulled, probably from the same chair and by the same technician. There was a permanent dentist's surgery in the base- ment of the Red Lion Hotel.
Its successor, pictured here, was built c1730, but was damaged by the weather and by a mine during the Second World War. It finally collapsed in the 1960s.
It was taken over by the Redland Group in 1958. Beare Green bricks form the unusual 'Brick Knot' sculpture that can be seen in the centre of Reigate.
Greyfriars Green is dominated by the spire of Christchurch (c1350), all that remains of a monastery established in 1234 and demolished in 1539.
By the 19th century the house had deteriorated, but Sir Thomas Acland, who preserved much of its surviving medieval decoration, restored it.
They were, of course, designed to make life easier when using transport of the four-legged variety, even though by the time this photograph was taken the motor car was beginning to make its presence felt
The church is believed to have been founded by the Knights Templar from Rothley.
This pavilion was built by the David Smith factory alongside the cricket pitch.
This view was taken looking north along the Broadway from the crossroads, showing the extent of the redevelopment carried out by the Onyx Property Investment Company over the two preceding decades and
It was a Royalist stronghold during the Civil War; it was attacked by the Roundheads and then 'slighted' (rendered unusable).
It was besieged and bombarded by Cromwell; destroyed in 1689 and subsequently rebuilt; garrisoned by Hanoverian troops in 1715; and partially dismantled in 1745 by the Jacobite Duchess of Perth to deny
Fittings from Hawkhill in Edinburgh were saved by the Scottish Georgian Society just two days before the building burnt down. Culdees Castle was demolished in 1967.
The body of the church is 14th century, but any patina of age was effectively neutralised by the over-restorations of 1849 and 1857.
Inside the quaint little church of St Michael and All Angels is a George III coat of arms dated 1784, signed by the Richmond painter Robert Coatsworth; he helped to paint the scenery for the opening
Notice the two large lamps by the path. There were wards for the inmates, laundries, kitchens and other facilities normally associated with a workhouse.
The antiques shop was previously used by the Bronte Society as a museum from 1895. Books and postcards of the literary sisters are on sale at the Haworth Post Office.
Behind the photographer, Dame Alice Street passes the Harpur Almshouses, a long row of brick cottages in the Tudor style thought suitable for such buildings, erected by the Harpur Trust in 1806 but refronted
The castle passed into the hands of the Neville family, and in 1471 Richard, Duke of Gloucester, came here to be tutored by the Earl of Warwick.
It was painted by the artist Karl Wood in 1931 in a derelict condition; it is now converted to a private house.
The Abbot at Gloucester complained that the monks sent to the village became so debased by the life there that, on their return home, they would inevitably corrupt the other monks.
A royal burgh and port, Irvine was, by the 1920s, a town of 7,000 inhabitants.
In the form of a cross, it is built in the Corinthian style, and surmounted by the giant dome which rises on arches over the centre.
The towering chapel of this school dominates the landscape for miles around; its position is wonderful, high above where the South Downs are cut deep by the Adur valley on its way to the sea.
Places (18)
Photos (360)
Memories (4406)
Books (10)
Maps (101)