Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- West End, Gwynedd
- West End, Hampshire (near Southampton)
- West End, Surrey (near Camberley)
- West End, Hampshire (near Medstead)
- West End, Leicestershire
- Ward End, West Midlands
- Shard End, West Midlands
- West End, Gloucestershire
- West End, Dorset
- West End, Hertfordshire
- West End, Suffolk
- West End, Sussex
- West End, Strathclyde
- West End, Gwent
- West End, Lancashire (near Morecambe)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Tadcaster)
- West End, Avon (near Nailsea)
- West End, Somerset (near Wells)
- West End, Oxfordshire (near Wallingford)
- West End, Berkshire (near Wokingham)
- West End, Norfolk (near Great Yarmouth)
- West End, Bedfordshire (near Great Staughton)
- West End, Kent (near Sittingbourne)
- West End, Yorkshire (near South Cave)
- West End, Avon (near Yate)
- West End, Wiltshire (near Shaftesbury)
- West End, Wiltshire (near Bowerchalke)
- West End, Berkshire (near Bracknell)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Driffield)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Hedon)
- West End, Lincolnshire (near Boston)
- West End, Cumbria (near Carlisle)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Cleckheaton)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Horsforth)
- West End, Oxfordshire (near Hardwick)
- West End, Bedfordshire (near Kempston)
Photos
279 photos found. Showing results 241 to 260.
Maps
1,651 maps found.
Books
19 books found. Showing results 289 to 19.
Memories
2,049 memories found. Showing results 121 to 130.
Convalescence 1960’s Style
My Grandmother was sent to Woodhurst Hospital, Peas Pottage, to convalesce following suffering from Bronchial Pneumonia. At the time we were living in Stockwell, South London, and for a small child it seemed to be a ...Read more
A memory of Pease Pottage by
Better Than A Knickerbocker Glory
Following a week at school the weekend was always eagerly anticipated, especially Saturdays. On this day I would take the long walk from home at the north end of Gipsy Road and make my way via Pickford Road to the ...Read more
A memory of Bexleyheath by
Watching A New Town Grow.
We moved to Harlow from Leyton shortly after Queen Elizabeth’s coronation. We were all given a commemorative book. Our house was in a row which was completed; the rest was a huge building site - magic for exploring kids! I ...Read more
A memory of Harlow by
Grandma's Shop
I was born Nov 5, 1939 at 81 Star Lane, the home of my maternal grandparents, James and Anne Maria Bullock. My mother, Annie Grace Bullock, was the youngest of six children. She married my father, Henry George Hooper, in 1935 at ...Read more
A memory of Canning Town by
Mrs Marzetties Farm
In 1956/7 I lived with my parents on a farm opposite West End pond. The farmer was a strange lady (in a little boy’s mind) called Mrs Marzetty. I remember she dressed like a man. Her daughter was called Nancy. Mother ...Read more
A memory of West End by
Coronation Day 1953
My brothers and I watched the Queen Elizabeth's Coronation with a neighbour; the screen was so small they added a special magnifying glass. Even in black and white I thought it was wonderful. It was a cold day so felt chilly as ...Read more
A memory of Ashtead by
A Polzeath Lad
I grew up in Polzeath and my two best mates also lived in the area, sadly, both dead now. I remember in the summers the CSSM coming down and staying in New Polzeath, arranging lots of beach games in the afternoons but building a ...Read more
A memory of Polzeath by
Memories
I was born in 54 Mill Street, Trecynon. As was my sister, our mother and her brothers and sitsters. A little 2 down 2 up, stone cottage. It was on the top of the hill, and we could run down "the trip" as we called it, and play there, ...Read more
A memory of Trecynon in 1947 by
First Job.
For about 6 wks prior to joining the navy in 1963, I worked at the Fyffes banana warehouse in Williamson St. (in photo). It paid about 3 quid a week (and all you could eat). Still, a handy easygoing fill-in job for a naive halfwit 15yr old ...Read more
A memory of Luton
Campsbourne Junior School Around 1960
I attended Campsbourne Junior School between 1958 and 1961. I arrived during the 2nd Year at the age of 8, having moved from St Michael's School in Highgate. I was placed in the top stream and my class teachers ...Read more
A memory of Hornsey by
Captions
1,994 captions found. Showing results 289 to 312.
The church of St John Baptist dates back to Norman times, when it consisted of a west tower, nave and chancel.
St Stephen's has a west tower with a spire and was almost entirely altered internally in the late Victorian period.
A west gallery was added in 1693 and a gallery on the south side in 1698, but both were removed in 1855.
It is quite a stocky, neo-Perpendicular building, with a west tower, nave and south aisle; the interior has single-framed roofs, and arched braces to the high collar beams in the chancel.
It is hard to disagree with the Dorset writer Sir Frederick Treves's comment, made almost 100 years ago, that Wimborne 'looks its best when seen from a distance'.
This is the countryside at its best!
St Stephen's has a west tower with a spire and was almost entirely altered internally in the late Victorian period.
St Stephen's has a west tower with a spire and was almost entirely altered internally in the late Victorian period.
Once surrounded by forested land, this church boasts remarkable timbered west and south porches built in the early 14th century, and comprising some fifty tons of oak wood.
The clock tower with its slated spire-like roof sits on the western range of the claustral buildings, above the enclosed garden to its west and the small cloister to its east.
Pevsner likened Hamble to a West Country fishing village, and he was right to make the comparison.
The wide, gently curving High Street is perhaps best admired from its lowest point and looking west.
Thatched cottage roofs are unusual in Cornwall, particularly this far west, and this one has seen several repairs.
The villages of West and East Lulworth now stand adjacent to vast military firing ranges, though fortunately they never suffered the fate of nearby Tyneham, which was taken by the army during the Second
Fishbourne in West Sussex is by far the most impressive Roman building in Britain, and is rightly called a palace.
The stone is from Chilmark, ten miles to the west, and the slender black shafts supporting the arches are of Purbeck marble.The wooden choir seats can be seen in the foreground: to the right is the
Fishbourne in West Sussex is by far the most impressive Roman building in Britain, and is rightly called a palace.
An old centre for the district that had a market close to the Hampshire border and the coast.
This Grade II listed building was built about 1824 for Thomas Hall, a West Riding magistrate from Castleford.
Before it was cut and constructed in the 1870s, traffic from the north-west and higher Salford had to wend its way through small back streets to reach the market and central Manchester (the Shambles).
This view looks west along Church Street.
Continue east along London Road to Beaufort Buildings West and East, long gently curving terraces of 1791 to 1815.
Development spread beyond the immediate area of the town to Bradda West and Bradda East; many of the houses in this picture have been built since picture No 47241 was taken in 1901 (page 113).
The bridge joining Wroxham to the west and Hoveton to the east was declared unsafe in the 1960s.
Places (99)
Photos (279)
Memories (2049)
Books (19)
Maps (1651)