Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
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Memories
65 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
Cranford Shops 1980s 2010
Starting from Tesco Express: This used to be a block of about 2 or 3 shops which included a building society and a travel agent. Next to this was Barclays Bank which closed down in the late 1980s/early 1990s. It remained ...Read more
A memory of Cranford
Dorie Lee Née Mather
Hi does anyone know Doris Lee née Mather I am looking for her thanks Beryl Clark née Jamieson known as Babs please email me at freddy1212@virginmedia.com
A memory of Doncaster by
New Addington
Hello does anyone who worked at Centronics do you remember me Babs Clark if so like to hear from you email me at freddy1212@virginmedia.com
A memory of New Addington in 1972 by
Centronics
Hi I worked at centronics King Henry,s Drive I would like to hear from anyone who also worked there I was in CRT and the glass shop I am known as Babs so if any one would like to get in touch with me I will be pleased to hear from you, email freddy1212@virginmedia.com
A memory of New Addington by
The Winter Of 1963 4 When Petts Wood Was Cut Off By Floods
I lived in Town Court Crescent with my parents, Norman and 'Babs' Treliving, from 1957 until 1974. The house was one of many designed by the architect Basil Scruby, whose name was carved ...Read more
A memory of Petts Wood by
Avonmouth Docks And Bocm Silcocks
In 1977 I finished a Teacher Training Course at Redland College in Bristol. I was in need of a temporary job and was to find one in Avonmouth Docks where BOCM Silcocks (who had produced animal feed from grain and ...Read more
A memory of Avonmouth by
Walker, Newcastle Upon Tyne
I was born in Moorland Crescent in the 1950’s. This council housing estate was built a few decades earlier and has a variety of different style good quality houses. Most people had nice gardens with flowers etc ...Read more
A memory of Newcastle upon Tyne by
Freefolk Priors
I have fond memories of Freefolk. I stayed at Freefolk Priors with my Aunt Babs and her three boys around about 1963. We would go down there for the duration of the school holidays and stay in her little house which overlooked the ...Read more
A memory of Freefolk in 1963 by
The Good Old Days Continued
I also recall the days when the old tramp used to go around the bins in the old market hall looking for food, and old Les the deaf mute who used to hang around the taxi rank on Market Hill, he used to go to Warwicks fish ...Read more
A memory of Luton by
Captions
55 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
As late as the 1940s, there was only one bus, a few motor taxis and some horse-drawn cabs on the island.
The Roman Catholic church, which is dedicated to St Thomas of Canterbury, was designed by J A Hansom, who was also the architect for Birmingham Town Hall; he is best remembered for the Hansom cab.
The railed enclosure with the lamp post has gone, but the 1885 drinking fountain and canopy, to the right of the 'growler' cab, remain, or rather were reinstated in 1979.
Victoria Square was originally called Commercial Place, and hackney cabs operated from stands here. The flower gardens have been replaced by a one-way system.
Cab fares in 1906 were 1s a mile for 1-2 persons, 1s 6d per mile for 3-5 persons, and fare and a half between midnight and 6.00am.
Hansom cabs line up in King's Parade, outside the elegant classically designed Senate House to the right.
A hansom cab waits for a fare outside the entrance to Christ's College.
Here the broad thoroughfare is thronged with carts, cabs and omnibuses. In the background are the offices of the Great Western Railway.
London Bridge is thronged with cabs, carriers, brewers' drays, hay wagons, omnibuses and carriages. A dense procession of top-hatted gentlemen hurry along the pavement to their city offices.
Most of the shops around the square have changed in the past ten years, including the thatched greengrocer's shop to the left of the Butter Cross, now a cab company and insurance office.
Horses are very prominent in our photograph: one brave horse cab is going through the waves, and horses from the 'vans' (bathing machines) are coming ashore.
Horse-drawn ambulances, taxi cabs, flat wagons, and even a horse bus were used to convey the patients down to the new Royal Infirmary on Oxford Road.
Behind rises the 303-foot spire of the Roman Catholic St Walburghe’s Church, which was completed in 1866 to a design by Joseph Hansom, inventor of the Hansom cab.
However, the cabs and carts are still relying on horse-power. Note the complexity of building styles along the street line – the Victorians had no concern for harmony or for what was appropriate.
Horse-drawn ambulances, taxi cabs, flat wagons, and even a horse bus were used to convey the patients down to the new Royal Infirmary on Oxford Road.
The builder, Joseph Aloysius Hansom, had earlier in 1836 patented the new safety cab bearing his name.
As late as the 1940s, there was only one bus, a few motor taxis and some horse-drawn cabs on the island.
The Transporter (or more correctly 'transbordeur') Bridge was a meccano- like structure below which moved a suspended cab.
Parts of the original Norman church can still be seen, though much of the present cathedral dates from the 13th to the 16th centuries.
Hansom cabs line up on Senate House Hill, alongside the elegant classically styled Senate House, the 'Parliament' building for the University.
Fore Street and the triangular medieval market place are the heart of the town: here we see the south side, behind the Market House's stand of horse-drawn cabs.
Just opposite are the offices of the Wharfedale Moor Cab Company, now demolished. Nearby is the site of the forthcoming 1930s Woolworth store and 1980s redevelopment.
The builder, Joseph Aloysius Hansom, had in 1836 patented the new safety cab bearing his name.
This view looks along Foregate Street; the bridge carrying the Great Western Railway lines to Hereford and South Wales can be seen in the background.
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