Places
26 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Cemmaes Road, Powys
- Six Road Ends, County Down
- Road Weedon, Northamptonshire
- Severn Road Bridge, Gloucestershire
- Roade, Northamptonshire
- Berkeley Road, Gloucestershire
- Harling Road, Norfolk
- Road Green, Devon
- Builth Road, Powys
- Cross Roads, Yorkshire
- Steele Road, Borders
- Cross Roads, Devon
- Four Roads, Dyfed
- Road Green, Norfolk
- Biggar Road, Strathclyde
- Clarbeston Road, Dyfed
- Five Roads, Dyfed
- Eccles Road, Norfolk
- Grampound Road, Cornwall
- Morchard Road, Devon
- Wood Road, Greater Manchester
- Four Roads, Isle of Man
- St Columb Road, Cornwall
- Clipiau, Gwynedd (near Cemmaes Road)
- New Road Side, Yorkshire (near Silsden)
- New Road Side, Yorkshire (near Cleckheaton)
Photos
14,329 photos found. Showing results 2,461 to 2,480.
Maps
476 maps found.
Books
5 books found. Showing results 2,953 to 5.
Memories
11,058 memories found. Showing results 1,231 to 1,240.
Married Quarters Inkerman Road
My dad was a military policeman stationed at Inkerman Barracks and we lived at No. 1 MSQ Inkerman Road. It was great fun there, the woods over the road, next to the Victoria Cafe (all now gone). To the side of No. 1 was ...Read more
A memory of Knaphill in 1959 by
I Know You!
It’s lovely to read all your memories especially yours Deb, my best friend! I was at Berwick Road Primary school from 1960-1965, I remember the aptly named Mrs Pie the dinner lady, also Mr Jones the new assistant head who had radical ...Read more
A memory of Little Sutton in 1960 by
Wheatley Hill
Hi, my name is Shirley Cross, my name was Shirley Stokoe and I lived in Thornley. My dad's nme was Robert Stokoe, he has now passed away. My memories of Wheatley Hill are nice. I remember spending a lot of time there growing up. I ...Read more
A memory of Wheatley Hill in 1966 by
Delivering Our Daily Bread
The picture shown is of Russell Road which runs left to right centre of the picture. Every day except Sunday during the early 1960s I used to deliver bread all around Weston Point and remember well reversing my Co-op van up ...Read more
A memory of Runcorn in 1961 by
Fair Green
I lived in that stange area of Mitcham known as Lonesome, situated between the level crossing at Eastfields and the bottom of Streatham Vale. It was a sort of 'No Man's Land'. My schooling from 1951- 1957 took place first at the wooden ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham in 1958 by
Albert Road, 2 Rose Cottages
My father was born at number 2 in 1911. My grandfather was a dairyman and would probably have worked at Parsonage Farm or Heron Hill Farm. All this is on my father's birth certificate. I imagine the place was on the right ...Read more
A memory of Belvedere in 1910 by
Happy Days At Mill Bridge
Hi to anyone looking at this photo, I lived just up the road at Valley Cottages and used to play by the bridge, we all sat on the bridge wall and had our photograph taken. I am on the right with wellington boots on, ...Read more
A memory of Bishop's Tawton in 1955 by
A Tiny Hamlet Lost In Time
The year was 1970. Myself and a friend were typical 15 year old youths of the time, well, typical for our type of neighborhood. We had long hair, pierced ears, denim jeans and jackets and owned but a couple of shillings ...Read more
A memory of Trelights in 1970 by
The Mersey Tunnel
To visit Grandma and Grandad McCann we travelled this way from Ellesmere Port. They lived in Scotland Road and he had a cobbler shop.
A memory of Liverpool in 1955 by
1958 1964
My name is Steve Whitfield, we lived in Whitecroft (on the Crossroads) and that is where I grew up. Went most of my time to boarding school with my two brothers, dating back to the 1960s. My father was employed as Chief Accountant for Jas. ...Read more
A memory of Quernmore by
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Captions
5,036 captions found. Showing results 2,953 to 2,976.
Between 1875 and 1880 the council bought out tolls on the Chesterfield, Langsett and Worksop roads; Hunter's Bar itself was removed on October 1884.
Needham, on the main road, was in ancient times a hamlet of Barking, but only became a parish in 1901.
Here we have another view of Whitehall, and the adjoining properties of Laurel Cottage and Vault Cottage along the Malden Road, with the elegant rectory beyond which, in its earliest parts, dates back
Not far from here in Palmerston Road, Handleys of Southsea, a department store and part of the Debenhams group, was 100 years old in 1967.
The war memorial has also been moved – it now sits well within a memorial garden across the road.
Seen in the centre of the photograph, but also marginalized, are the houses alongside the old Hereford Road and the steam of the Hereford to Abergavenny train.
The residences seen (right) through the shrubbery are their enclave – the grand villas of Bridgman Road and neighbouring Marine Parade.
At the Stamford Road end of the street, the newly-built showroom of Tutty's sold kitchen units and appliances. Newman's next door was an old-fashioned ironmongers, which has resisted change.
These gates, with agricultural implements incorporated, are situated at the Holly Lodge on the Boughton Road west of the village.
Church Street and the roads off to the left are part of a grid of Victorian brick, terraced, straight streets.
The village itself lies to the south of the main road and is therefore often overlooked. To this day it retains many quiet corners.
The salt mines underground are enormous, so large that miles and miles of road systems, big enough for double-decker buses, have been formed to travel around on; in fact there are 22 million cubic metres
These thatched cottages are on either side of the road to Brent Pelham at the eastern, outer reaches of Anstey.
After almost 70 years use, it was sold and a new Constables built on Leicester Road in 1929.
Here, the High Street splits into three roads: to Leicester; to South Back Way and to Stockerston. The rather crude signpost has now gone and there is no entry from this direction.
Facing the Green Dragon across the road is a terrace of stone cottages, with the New Inn at the end. Next door to the Green Dragon, an antiquated Regent petrol pump indicates a garage.
At the time of this photograph, Hoskins, a family brewery in Beaumanor Road, Belgrave, in Leicester, owned this, their one public house.
Fronting the road, beyond the outbuildings in the two previous views, is the 17th-century cottage where the zoo park started some seventy years ago; its outbuildings became the gift shop
It owes its solitude to the fact that the Exeter road bypasses it.
In the foreground is the Beach House Hotel, now Beach Court (left), with the Marine Snack Bar on the opposite side of the road.
This part of Blackburn Road was a hive of activity with lots of shops.
Ditchling Beacon is a famous vantagepoint 813 feet up on the Downs with panoramic views.There are dewponds alongside the road by the Beacon.
We are looking northwards from below Priory Corner, across urban Portland from Killicks Hill and the school at Clovens Road above Chesil Cove (bottom left), to Chiswell, Fortuneswell (centre) and Castletown
Note the ladder on the pavement to the right of the picture, the scarcity of traffic, and the complete absence of road markings.
Places (26)
Photos (14329)
Memories (11058)
Books (5)
Maps (476)