Places
32 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire
- Stowe School, Buckinghamshire
- Willingham by Stow, Lincolnshire
- Stow Bridge, Norfolk
- West Stow, Suffolk
- Stow, Lincolnshire
- Stowe, Staffordshire
- Stowe, Lincolnshire
- Stowe, Gloucestershire
- Stowe, Hereford & Worcester
- Stowe, Shropshire
- Stow, Borders
- Church Stowe, Northamptonshire
- Hoffleet Stow, Lincolnshire
- Stow Park, Gwent
- Stow Bardolph, Norfolk
- Stowe Green, Gloucestershire
- Stow Bedon, Norfolk
- Stow Maries, Essex
- Shepeau Stow, Lincolnshire
- Nether Stowe, Staffordshire
- Stow cum Quy, Cambridgeshire
- Stow Longa, Cambridgeshire
- Upper Stowe, Northamptonshire
- Stow Lawn, West Midlands
- Normanby by Stow, Lincolnshire
- Lower Stow Bedon, Norfolk
- Stowe-by-Chartley, Staffordshire
- Sturton by Stow, Lincolnshire
- Idbury, Oxfordshire (near Stow-on-the-Wold)
- Broadwell, Gloucestershire (near Stow-on-the-Wold)
- Donnington, Gloucestershire (near Stow-on-the-Wold)
Photos
170 photos found. Showing results 21 to 40.
Maps
173 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
76 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
Boyhood Memories
My aunt Jessie (King) lived in the house on the left of the picture from around 1920 to 1954. In 1954 she moved out and my uncle Sidney (Edwards) ( her brother) moved into the house and turned it into a little tea room come ...Read more
A memory of East Bergholt in 1946 by
Hobbayne During The Late 70s 80s
I attended Hobbayne when Mrs Stanley was headmistress and teachers such as MRs Stowe, Mrs Chester's, Mr Coleman and the caretaker Mr Holman with his three wheeler were omniscient. Sports day was always fund and ...Read more
A memory of Hanwell by
The First Rural Council Houses.
This village has the very first Rural Council Houses in England,- not pictured in your photographs,- but situated in Stow Road. They were built by the Thingoe R.D.C. following a lengthy argument and legal demands by the ...Read more
A memory of Ixworth by
Bradley, Bilston And Stowlawn
I managed to enter the world in Lord Street, West Bradley, 1944. I attended St Martins and earliest I can remember lived in a prefab in Moxley (Castleview Road). After St Martins I attended Stonefield school. Moved to ...Read more
A memory of Tipton by
My First Home
I lived in the prefab you can see on the right of this photograph, 4 Windsor Crescent, and moved there when I was one years old. I loved living there and have many happy memories. Already the council houses were being built ...Read more
A memory of Ingoldmells by
High Cross House And Dorothy Elmhirsts Steinway Grand Piano
On the beautiful Dartington Hall Estate there is a unique “International Modernist House”, now used as a gallery, just to the north-east of Dartington Hall School. High Cross ...Read more
A memory of Dartington Hall in 2012 by
The Arkwrights
We moved to Harlow from London in 1954 when our house was brand new. We lived in The Arkwrights and when it opened I went to St Albans Primary. Later I went to Netteswell Seondary, which has now been demolished. I have so many happy ...Read more
A memory of Harlow in 1954
Pineapple Cottages Lower Swell
My gran's name was Lily Illes and she lived in one of Pineapple Cottages at Lower Swell as a child. She left home at 15 to go and work in London and then moved to Scotland with my grandpa. I have visted and stayed ...Read more
A memory of Lower Swell by
Miss Canning,
Miss Canning did not have the haberdashery store, that was Mrs Graham and her shop was next door to Stows Stores. In the back was a little tea room and a girl called Lilly Bodice worked with her. The shop and cottage she ...Read more
A memory of Chapel St Leonards in 1930 by
National Oil Refinery
I started work at the laboratory in the Llandarcy Oil Refinery in 1942 for the great weekly wage of one pound, one shilling and ninepence, when I was 16. Mostly women worked in the lab but once the war was over the company ...Read more
A memory of Llandarcy in 1942
Captions
91 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
Fixtures were suspended on the outbreak of war and the FA Cup was stowed away in the strongroom in the basement of the Guildhall until 1945.
Georgian buildings abound in the town, although it harks back to Tudor times; it owes much of its early development to Thomas Seckford, a lawyer at the court of Elizabeth I.
Dedicated to St Mary Magdalene, Westoning's parish church closely follows other church architecture in Bedfordshire villages, being in the Early English style with battlements and buttresses and a tower
The town features slightly in his novel 'Two on a Tower', which was written at that time.
It owes its continued existence to the patronage of Saxon kings and its later adoption by the Normans.
Hunstanton's chief feature is its distinctive white and red banded cliffs, which rise from nothing at this point to a towering 30 metres just 300 metres further north.
White Nancy is a tower situated on the ridge to the south of the town, and is said to have been built by a member of the Gaskell family to commemorate the Battle of Waterloo, and to be named after one
Situated at the northern top of the green is the metal sign, showing a tower mill.
This is a picture of tranquillity perhaps, but the Gipping was effectively a canal with a tow path, made to assist the carriage of goods upstream as far as Stowmarket.
The simple little 13th-century parish church of the Holy Cross at Upper Langwith, east of Bolsover and close to the border of Nottinghamshire, may not have a tower, but it is nevertheless a gem of Perpendicular
Originally a smock mill, and rebuilt as a tower mill, it fell into disrepair during the Second World War.
Looking more like two churches than one, Ormskirk's parish church is unique in the north for having both a tower and spire.
To the right behind the houses is Tower Hill, the site of Gourock Castle.
It is a splendid example of High Victorian Gothic designed by Henry Woodyer, with a tower and spire 165 feet high.
St Mary's Church, just visible amongst the trees, was rebuilt with a tower after the steeple fell off the original building in 1792.
This photograph was taken from Folly Bridge, which originally had a tower and gatehouse.
Longdon's church, seen here behind the trees, has a tower and spire dating from the 14th century.
On the west bank of the Ant stood Ludham Mill, a tower mill nearly 50ft high to the iron curb, with a base diameter of 12ft 4in, including 18in thick walls.
These features included a tower-keep separated from the rest of the castle by its own moat, multiangular towers, and ornate machiolations of the type seen here adorning the tops of the hexagonal corner
This Victorian photograph was taken from Folly Bridge, which originally had a tower and gatehouse and was used by Roger Bacon, the 13th-century astronomer and scientist, as an observatory.
An excellent view of the gable end of this church showing the 13th century lancet windows and above them the roof-line of the original nave.
An excellent view of the gable end of this church showing the 13th century lancet windows and above them the roof-line of the original nave.
Laleham's charming parish church has a tower dating back to 1732; it has been altered somewhat since this photograph was taken.
The Royal Marine Hotel on the left has now succumbed to a towering ten storey block of flats, Metropole Court, one of three architectural disasters along the sea front.
Places (32)
Photos (170)
Memories (76)
Books (0)
Maps (173)