Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Dale, Dyfed
- Thornton Dale, Yorkshire
- Monsal Dale, Derbyshire
- Darley Dale, Derbyshire
- Denby Dale, Yorkshire
- Miller's Dale, Derbyshire (near Buxton)
- Peak Dale, Derbyshire
- Two Dales, Derbyshire
- Walton-le-Dale, Lancashire
- Ashwood Dale, Derbyshire
- Chee Dale, Derbyshire
- Chapel-le-Dale, Yorkshire
- Longville in the Dale, Shropshire
- Dale, Cumbria
- Dale, Greater Manchester
- Ashley Dale, Staffordshire
- Dale Bottom, Cumbria
- Dale Moor, Derbyshire
- Stony Dale, Nottinghamshire
- Slatepit Dale, Derbyshire
- Tivy Dale, Yorkshire
- Glen Dale, Highlands
- Dale Abbey, Derbyshire
- Dales Green, Staffordshire
- Harwood Dale, Yorkshire
- Lindrick Dale, Yorkshire
- Knightley Dale, Staffordshire
- Strothers Dale, Northumberland
- Blidworth Dale, Nottinghamshire
- Martin Dales, Lincolnshire
- Coplow Dale, Derbyshire
- Goseley Dale, Derbyshire
- Dale Brow, Cheshire
- Dale End, Yorkshire
- Worsbrough Dale, Yorkshire
- Rakes Dale, Staffordshire
Photos
474 photos found. Showing results 21 to 40.
Maps
848 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 25 to 4.
Memories
220 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
A Lovely Place To Grow Up!
I was born in Arnold Avenue, just five minutes walk from the George pub, which was handy later on in my life. Also the post office opposite the pub, which was owned by Mr & Mrs Fit-Simons, who used to have rows of ...Read more
A memory of Meopham in 1956 by
Oddington 1946 1959
I was born in Moreton in Marsh and lived the first 13 years of my life in Oddington. My father was a farmer and we lived at Green Farm right in the middle of the village. We used to have the village bonfire (November ...Read more
A memory of Lower Oddington by
My Memories Of Selly Oak And Bournbrook
I was born Anne Shirley Crofts back of 622 Bristol Road (opposite where Aldi is now) in July 1944, brother Ronnie was born 1940, sister Vivienne was born 1942, and Alan was born 1947, between Riverton Road ...Read more
A memory of Selly Oak in 1954 by
Coomercial Studies
Went to the college from Heolgam Secondary school when I was 16. Took shothand, typing and all office Business related studies was Dale Stanton then. Although I went to a secondary school I still managed to get my O and A ...Read more
A memory of Bridgend in 1968 by
Tax Farm, Two Dales
My parents and older sisters Margaret, Cynthia, Brenda and Christine lived at Tax Farm, Two Dales in the late 1930s - early 1940s - surname Taylor. They attended Darley Dale School and have very fond memories of being there.
A memory of Two Dales
Luther Paxton Plumber
The building jutting out into Castle Hill on the left upper of this picture is no. 17 and was my Great Uncle Luther Paxton's plumbers shop. The shop was on the ground floor and he and his wife, Amy lived on the upper two ...Read more
A memory of Richmond in 1948 by
Penrhiwceiber Road
Looking on the left, just below 'Ceiber Hall' was a grocery shop, I think where the white blind is down, caled 'the Meadow Stores'. My brother Desmond James started work there as an errand boy delivering goods to the ...Read more
A memory of Penrhiwceiber in 1955 by
Early Memories Of An Ascotonian
I was born at 40 Bracken Bank (off Fernbank Road) in June 1953. I attended Ascot Heath Primary School on the original site in Fernbank Road, from 1958 until 1964. I remember Richard Dale from these days, although I ...Read more
A memory of Ascot in 1960 by
New Lanark Mills
New Lanark World Heritage Centre, the Mills and Robert Owen's and David Dale's houses belonged to my grandfather the late Jack Williamson, his company was Metal Extractions. It is a travesty and a tragedy that his property was ...Read more
A memory of Lanark in 1973 by
Captions
142 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
The Monsal Head Hotel commands one of the finest and most photographed views in the Peak District, extending across the Monsal Dale Viaduct towards Fin Cop, and north towards Upperdale.
Upper Monsal Dale is seen here from the Monsal Head Hotel. In breathtaking splendour, the river picks its way through the valley. The old railway line is visible in the distance.
This view of Middleton Dale, near Eyam, has totally changed today.
The Monsal Head Hotel, seen here in the mid-50s, commands a spectacular view down into Monsal and Upper Dale from its slightly incongruous Tyrolean balcony which was added to the substantial limestone
The farmer sits on his cutter as it slices through the sweet-smelling hay crop that will keep his stock through the bitter Dales winter.
The station and extensive sidings at Peak Dale were mainly for the transportation of limestone from the surrounding quarries - we can see some of them in the background of this photograph.
This view shows Curbar and Baslow Edges in the background, with the houses of the village filling the dale in the foreground.
St Oswald's parish church at Askrigg is the mother church of Wensleydale, and it is easily the largest church in the dale.
The smithy stood there, and in Butts Lane was a tithe barn and turf dales at what was then called West End.
The traffic-free minor road meanders south between drystone walls through the dale, towards Grange and Rosthwaite.
Bradwell is built on the steep slopes of Bradwell Dale, and the Steps are an easy way for pedestrians to get from the lower to the upper part of the village.
Grassington is still one of the most popular among Dales villages for the tourist, and scenes of congestion like this one are still common today.
The wooded slopes of Middleton Dale, west of the village of Youlgreave and near the hamlet of Middleton-by- Youlgreave, offer a tranquil walk in beautiful surroundings by the banks of the frequently-weired
As a major southern entrance to the delights of the Peak District, Darley Dale has always catered for visitors.
Early tourists were 'horrified' at the expanses of naked rock and impending mountains of places like Borrowdale, and feared to travel far into the dale, until poets like Wordsworth popularised the 'picturesque
In Roman times, Walton-le-Dale was known as Rigodunum, and in Saxon times it was called Waelletune. The manor was granted to Robert Bannastre by Henry de Lacy in the 12th century.
Non-conformist places of worship, such as this Baptist chapel erected in 1876 at Cononley, just south of Skipton in Airedale, are common in the villages of the Yorkshire Dales, reflecting the stubbornly
Malham, with its famous Cove, is still a major Dales honeypot.
A flock of white-nosed Swaledale sheep are driven down the road from the village green by a shepherd and his dog in the Upper Wharfedale village of Buckden in the Yorkshire Dales.
The name comes from the fact that it is a linear village strung out along the valley road, which runs close to the river on the northern side of the dale.
This scene today would be largely obscured by trees, which have grown up since grazing ceased in the dale.
This is a closer view of Darley Dale, looking towards the solitary tree-topped Oker Hill, which was the subject of a sonnet by William Wordsworth published in 1829 about two local lads going to war
The inn is typical of many in the villages of the Yorkshire Dales, originally relying on trade from local residents and farmers, but now mainly on tourist traffic.
A fascinating early photograph which shows the crags below Hay Top in Monsal Dale, and beyond them the freshly-excavated limestone scree (centre) of the embankment which was to take the Midland line
Places (53)
Photos (474)
Memories (220)
Books (4)
Maps (848)