Places
10 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,534 photos found. Showing results 2,541 to 2,534.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
8,173 memories found. Showing results 1,271 to 1,280.
Liphook
My grandfather was the manager of Smorthwaites, the Chemist, opposite the Anchor Hotel in the middle of Liphook. My mother was born in Liphook and lived in the house next door to the Chemist's on the south. My earliest memory of ...Read more
A memory of Headley Down by
Pontypool
My family lived in The Globe in Crane Street from 1973 until I guess 1980, although I had left in 1979, John and Kitty, ran a fab pub which was always very busy with many customers working in the council and police station. The pub was ...Read more
A memory of Talywain in 1978 by
Church Parade At St Margaret's Church In Hooley
During the period we lived in the Fruit Shop in Hooley (see Hooley pages) I belonged in the Girl Guides and my Sister Moira was in the Brownies. (Actually, when we moved into the Fruit Shop I was ...Read more
A memory of Chipstead by
Barkingside In The 1960s
I remember growing up in Barkingside in the 1960s, going to the State cinema on Saturday mornings, the trolly buses that ran along the high road, Green & Dyson groceries where my mum worked, Fairlop School 1961-66. ...Read more
A memory of Barkingside in 1860 by
Happy Days
I lived in Hornchurch 1946-58. Went to school at North Street Primary and then for a brief time to Dury Falls before we moved in 1958. My father ran Cramphorns Corn and Seed Merchants, which can just be seen in this photo. My best ...Read more
A memory of Hornchurch in 1950 by
R & H Law
My Grandfather, Harry Dewhurst, was a partner/owner (I am not sure of the exact commercial position) of R & H Law (Main Street, Grange-over-Sands) in the 1950s. I remember R & H Law having all all four shop fronts as per ...Read more
A memory of Grange-Over-Sands in 1960 by
Living Opposite The Catholic Church In Somerton
I lived opposite the Catholic church from 1949 untill 1970 when I joined the army. I was friends then with Bridget Cox and Eileen White. We went to Sunday school at the Congregational church for ...Read more
A memory of Somerton in 1960 by
Memories Of Somerton.
Yes I remember The Triangle, I used to buy fish and chips at Coopers fish and chip shop. They had a collie dog like Lassie, called Shaun. My dad used to take me to Mr. Law's shop to buy my school shoes. His shop was on the left of the picture. On the right used to be a carpet shop.
A memory of Somerton in 1964 by
The Good Old Days
I remember going to Our Lady of Lourdes church behind Cove Green with my older brother and younger sister, we were dropped off by our grandpop only to spend the collection money we were given by our parents at Charlie's sweet shop, ...Read more
A memory of Cove in 1967 by
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
Captions
3,478 captions found. Showing results 3,049 to 3,072.
Dressed stone walls, bay windows on the cottages, a corner shop, two early television aerials and motor traffic indicate that times are changing.
Only two things were excluded from this village - a pub and a pawn shop.
On the left is a small shop, now an accountants' office. The pillar box is now further down the High Street. In the foreground are Nos 1 and 2 Debden Road.
Amongst the shops on the left are the Bazaar of the Misses Parsonson, Robert Joy's carpet warehouse, John Payn, a stationer's, and James Read, a furniture dealer's (now Boots).
The gabled house was built in 1912, but it lost its circular window when the shop front was extended in the 1960s.
This view gives a good idea of the village's architectural mix, with older stone cottages with thatched roofs, mid 19th-century cottages with sash windows and slate roofs, and to the left of the shop (
The sign on the shop wall, where the tickets were sold, shows that admission to the Priory Church was 6d.
H Block, housing the press shop, is the nearer building. Note how wartime camouflage paint is still visible; it remained so until at least the late 1970s.
On the left-hand side, W Cushen, a silk mercer and undertaker's office, is followed by a fruiterer and greengrocer's, a stationery shop, a barber's, and a fishmonger.
In the 1960s it was a village shop, but that now has closed. Further up is Crabtree Farm, built on the site of six burnt-out cottages in 1733.
Built in 1858, the arcade is a fantastic example of opulent Victorian architecture, with some original shop fronts still surviving.
His son opened the cycle shop in Malden Road in 1921on his return from service in the First World War.
Goathland, also on the popular North Yorkshire Moors Railway, which carries 200,000 passengers each year, has become a haven of tea and souvenir shops.
The bow- fronted shop next door used to be a snack bar but in more recent years became a saddlery, an estate agency and then a recruitment agency.
Beyond, the shops have gone too, and the building is now Cyclops Cottage. The Swan pub is late Victorian, but it fits in well.
So, Wilmslow became a thriv- ing mixed community and the shopping centre for the whole area; more of a town than a village.
On the right is Eastwood's musical instruments shop — it appears to be on Briercliffe Road, but it is actually at 119 Colne Road. The sunblinds protected the various instruments from sunlight.
Chaplins, owners of the lorry outside the Joy Shop in picture L20007, carried goods not only for the Southern Railway but also for the Great Western, in whose premises they had their depot.
The setting is not as good as it was in the 1890s, for the houses to the right, out of view, were replaced by awful 1960s shops with offices over.
Ye Olde Harrow Inn and the two- storey shops beyond went in the 1980s, but the tall three-storey brick building beyond of 1897 survives.
The precursor of Rhyl's amusement arcades, it advertised '... theatre, ballroom, restaurant, waxworks, winter garden, underground canal with gondolas, arcade of shops, zoo, sideshows, all provided on a
We can see part of the old post office, now a heating and plumbing shop (left), and the entrance to the precinct on the right.
On the right are the National Provincial bank, the Alliance, and the mock-Tudor front of Henley's children's shop, which lost a gable width in 1891 when the Alliance was built.
Regay the cleaners and dyers have their van parked outside their shop (left).
Places (10)
Photos (2534)
Memories (8173)
Books (0)
Maps (71)