Places
3 places found.
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Photos
999 photos found. Showing results 381 to 400.
Maps
22 maps found.
Books
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Memories
912 memories found. Showing results 191 to 200.
Bobby Rab
I remember Bobby Rab and his roan & white Clydesdale horse that pulled the big cart with Bobby Rab sitting on it. They worked for Murray Forrest the coal merchant in Beresford terrace and delivered coal. They could be seen in Burns Statue ...Read more
A memory of Ayr by
Jennys Cafe
does anyone remeber jennys cafe ? It was in Martindale Road, opposite the infant and junior schools. There were a row of about 6 cottages in a terrace and jennys was on the end. There was also a hardwear shop and a drapery shop which was ...Read more
A memory of Hounslow by
1973 Demolition Year For The Market Buildings
I arrived in Wolverhampton when demolition of the market buildings was under way. The buildings in front of the church (in the photo) must have already been long gone, but the buildings on the side of ...Read more
A memory of Wolverhampton
My Memories Of Drum Chapel In It's Infancy
I lived in Tallant Terrace from the early fifties until the family moved to Cumbernauld in 1969. At that time, Jedworth Avenue etc was not yet built. There was a gunsite there, and we used to play hide and ...Read more
A memory of Drumchapel by
Happy Days
My family moved from Tottenham in 1949. There was only 5 children and Mum and Dad at the time. Nice new terraced house in Faringdon Ave - Gooshayes end. I was born in that house in 1954. My younger sisters (twins) were born in Oldchurch ...Read more
A memory of Harold Hill by
Living In Old Cullercoates
My grandparents lived in Simpson Street and auntie in Elizabeth Street. I am wondering if anyone remembers Garden Terrace, and the old school in John Street where my grandma worked? My grandfather was killed aboard the ...Read more
A memory of Cullercoats in 1965 by
Furzton Lake
I am greatly surprised that there are no photos of Furzton Lake in the Frith archive. Our son David lived in a modern terraced house in Winsford Hill, Furzton until 2005. I remember there was a gap in the hedge with a gate we installed ...Read more
A memory of Furzton in 2000 by
Tait Avenue
I was born in 1949, soon after my parents had moved into 36 Tait Avenue, one of the first Council Houses to be built at Hill Top, New Edlington. I lived there until 1963 shortly before the Comprehensive School was built on farmland ...Read more
A memory of New Edlington in 1949 by
My Dad
My dad was born in Harcourt Terrace in Penrhiwceiber in 1910, his name was Wyndham Stephen Jones, he started in the mines then joined the Army. My grandad was also born there, as the rest of my Welsh family whom were coal miners. My ...Read more
A memory of Penrhiwceiber by
The Ghost
My dad, even though married he was one for playing the field. Mother was taking care of my brother's kids (his wife had died, he was a Flight Sargent), Mother was miles away and Dad played about. One afternoon he had picked up a ...Read more
A memory of Royston by
Captions
549 captions found. Showing results 457 to 480.
The 1890s terrace with its four gabled full-height bay windows steps down the hill; the left-hand one on the corner of Outwood Lane is now no longer a Barclays Bank, but the offices of financial consultants
Some of the cottages in St Nicholas Terrace, which is located to the north of the church, are 18th-century, and one of them is dated 1771.
The Pavilion fronted the Steine, and on the east side opposite are some excellent late 18th-century houses amid taller Victorian ones, but mostly single houses rather than terraces; the bow fronts are
Much of the old village with its rows and terraces of small flint cottages survives amid the sprawl.
In its place stands a row of brick terraced cottages. In the distance, the thatched building with the brick chimney forms part of the original village school and the School House.
Now the Bee Hive Store and Post Office have been built at the end of the terrace and provide service six and a half days a week.
The tramway runs up the face of the cliff on a gradient of about one in three, and terminates opposite Prince of Wales Terrace.
The new homes ranged from small terraced houses, three-bedroom semi-detached houses and four-bedroom houses.
We are looking north-westwards from the Quay beside Pier Terrace to the old Salt House (centre), which is now the Harbour Museum.
Above the cliffs we can just see the Park Hotel, built as a terrace of three houses, part of a larger development of North Cliff which never materialised.
The flourishing cedar of Lebanon on the right of the upper terrace of the garden, like the surrounding pine trees, clearly found the topography and climate to its liking.
This view shows Middle Street and Village Road, between the flagstone-topped terraces of high raised pavements, looking towards the 1863-built spire of Holy Trinity parish church in the northern
In this view there is an early 19th-century Regency style rendered cottage with a verandah and, nearer the camera, a terrace of late 18th-century brick cottages with Tudor Estate styles in the distance
Barclays Bank, which has by now replaced part of the terrace on the left, dates from 1924: it is a typical example of the pretentious architecture beloved of banks.
This row of terraced labourers` cottages lies opposite Hilton Village Hall, previously the school, and adjacent to the maze.
Ozone Terrace is still partly visible (left),and so are weather- boarded Wings and Cobb Gate (centre right) behind the North Wall of the harbour.
Off Church Lane to the right is Amport House, built in 1857, now the Forces Chaplains College, with Lutyens terraces planted by Jekyll.
The Royal Beacon Hotel was built c1810 at the end of the fashionable Beacon Terrace.
The village itself expanded too, but here there were older buildings, such as the Post Office, seen here amid an irregular terrace of brick and tile-hanging.
There has been change here, with development on both sides of the road, though the white building in the centre and the terrace of houses remain.
The terraced walk of the Pantiles, with its row of shops behind a colonnade faced by lime trees, was first laid out in 1638.
The terraced walk of the Pantiles, with its row of shops behind a colonnade faced by lime trees, was first laid out in 1638.
These terraces of neat Edwardian bay-windowed houses survive, and lead towards the Town Hall with its tower.
This picture clearly shows the split- level look of the Walk, as it was known until Edwardian times, with the Cart Road being the lower terrace from Cobb Gate to the sands beside the
Places (3)
Photos (999)
Memories (912)
Books (0)
Maps (22)