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 2,621 to 2,534.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
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Memories
8,173 memories found. Showing results 1,311 to 1,320.
Old Bentalls Springbridge Rd
I remember in the fifties there was an exhibition by British Rail showing the future. Father Xmas was visited there and presents received. Later on visits to the china and kitchen departments were what interested me. The ...Read more
A memory of Ealing by
Growing Up In Buckhurst Hill 60's 70's
I used to live in The Meadway, and went to St Johns infants School-a few memories of playing on 'the boxes' at play/lunchtime. These were actually old beer crates, and long before health and safety spoiled ...Read more
A memory of Buckhurst Hill by
Tanner Street Barking
Anyone remember the junction of Tanner St. and Church Street in Barking, .... on the corner was the Britannia pub? My nan, (Alice Snell) was born in the ironmonger's shop next door to the pub and her father ran the shop ... but was it in Tanner or Church Street?
A memory of Barking by
Richardson 3 Upper Close
Born 25 Dec1938 at numder 3. I have three sisters and a btother who were also born there. Iwenr to the primary school till Dec 1953 then worked at Forest Row garage until I moved to Australia Dec 1954.Ican remember a lot ...Read more
A memory of Forest Row by
Hernville School And Honeywell Shool
My name was Ann Lawrance I lived in a prefab in Calbourne Road from 1945 till about 1956 I went to Hernvile Primary School then Honeywell Secondary school in the Royal ...Read more
A memory of Balham by
Hipperholme When I Was A Child.
"The little wooden hut next to the pub ,might have been Peter Manning's paper shop, but the "other wooden hut adjoining it was a chip shop when I was a kid and Mr. Ainley had it then. He also had a tiny little ...Read more
A memory of Hipperholme by
From 1959 Gooshays Stanley Wright
I moved to Harold hill in 58 from shoreditch to Montgomery crescent then to 49 gooshays drive and my sisters Pat,Brenda and Sandra my brother Paul came in 63.I moved to Australia in 1978 with my wife Jacqueline ...Read more
A memory of Harold Hill by
Quest For A Steep Hill In Dronfield With Post Office And Shops And Junction At The Bottom In Early 1960s....
Does anybody know which road it would have been? Up to age 3 I lived at Coal Aston between 1957 and 1960. I have a vague memory of my Mum pushing me in the pram and myself walking on this steep road.....
A memory of Dronfield by
The 'cleopatra Restaurant' Next To The Northwood Hills Hotel, Elton John, Bluesology And 'toys And Sports'.
Seeing the photo of the 'Northwood Hills Hotel' and the tall 'office' building beyond, took me back to recall 'The Cleopatra Restaurant' that ...Read more
A memory of Northwood Hills by
Captions
3,478 captions found. Showing results 3,145 to 3,168.
On the right, however, all has gone under the 1960s blizzard of redevelopment: the jewellers and the Greyhound Hotel made way for Friars Square shopping centre.
In the closing stages of the war, a V2 nearly hit Commer Karrier's despatch shop in Biscot Road, destroying a house.
The ground floor was again rebuilt in 1873, including the round arched windows, which were retained after its closure in 1996 when it was converted into two shops.
claim is Kent's prettiest village: the tower of its 15th-century flintstone church of St Mary's looks down on this spacious square lined with half-timbered Tudor and Jacobean cottages, houses and shops
The row on the right tells of a not-so-distant past: these are clearly old houses left behind, now forming shops and protected by the essential awning.
This advertises the shop as an agent of Sketchley Dye Works, Hinckley (Leicestershire). The company survives today as cleaners and workwear suppliers.
Above the doorway of the shop on the right is the famous logo of 'His Master's Voice' – the gramophone had become a fashionable gadget in every home.
On the eve of the 60s, the bicycle shop has gone and the car now reigns supreme in the square, which is signed as the A1. Coca Cola and snack bars have arrived too.
A remarkably foreshortened shot, westwards down West Street, with the 1785-built arch (far left) being the north- west corner of the Town Hall.
The hairdresser's (right) with its barber's pole has gone, and so has the Gilbey's Wine sign beyond - that shop is now a modern chemist's.
A poster in the shop window is for the re-opening of the organ and choir gallery in St Andrew's Parish Church.
, but many of the buildings seen in this view, particularly on the left- hand side, have gone, including the 1880s Barclays Bank, which is now a building at the entrance to the 1980s Swan Shopping
This view is taken on the Portsmouth Road, now the A3100, with Church Road, the A286 Midhurst and Chichester road, heading to the left of the painted brick shop on the corner, which is now an Alldays
This is the main shopping area of the town; the architecture matches the period of rapid development after the railway arrived.
The shop was demolished along with the gardens as part of the road widening scheme.
The first shop on the right belonged to Mr Strutt, who sold many things; he also ran a taxi business.
Beyond the stucco three-storey buildings, the twin-gabled building and much around it were demolished in the 1960s to make way for the shopping precinct.
Here we see Back Street (left) and the Square (right), with the flamboyant Victorian double shop fronts of the grocers G H Stephens & Company on the corner (centre).
The Midland Bank is on the left, with Stead & Simpson's shoe shop next door. Wide streets denote a planned town.
The postmaster Mr Charman (standing to the right of the ladies) also ran a newsagent's and gift shop in the High Street.
Here we see a very traditional streetscape, with original shop fronts and a unified feel uncluttered by the traffic of today.
This view, showing the centre of Ewell village, was taken looking north towards the Horse Pond and Spring Corner, and includes several splendid examples of the motor vehicles of the period.
In 1913, the shop on the right sold R White's lemonade, which was manufactured in Walkern.
To the south-east of mediaeval Finchley, the High Road drops down from the North Circular Road between an almost standard series of parade shops built around the turn of the century, and past the Rex Cinema
Places (10)
Photos (2534)
Memories (8173)
Books (0)
Maps (71)