Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- New Row, Dyfed
- Forest Row, Sussex
- Chigwell Row, Essex
- Low Row, Yorkshire
- Middleton One Row, Durham
- Red Row, Northumberland
- Collier Row, Essex
- Stoke Row, Oxfordshire
- Row, Cumbria (near Kendal)
- Row, Cornwall
- Row, Cumbria (near Langwathby)
- Authorpe Row, Lincolnshire
- Corner Row, Lancashire
- Medhurst Row, Kent
- Spooner Row, Norfolk
- The Rowe, Staffordshire
- Tittle Row, Berkshire
- Winkfield Row, Berkshire
- Higher Row, Dorset
- Heather Row, Hampshire
- Helmington Row, Durham
- Rotten Row, Berkshire
- North Row, Cumbria
- Alder Row, Somerset
- Frost Row, Norfolk
- Smokey Row, Buckinghamshire
- Shiplake Row, Oxfordshire
- Row Green, Essex
- Row Heath, Essex
- West Row, Suffolk
- Tottenhill Row, Norfolk
- Will Row, Lincolnshire
- Ulcat Row, Cumbria
- Billy Row, Durham
- Beck Row, Suffolk
- Broadland Row, Sussex
Photos
711 photos found. Showing results 401 to 420.
Maps
566 maps found.
Books
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Memories
1,283 memories found. Showing results 201 to 210.
Greasborough Dam
I was born on Church St, Greasbrough, gran and granddad lived close by in a row of cottages alongside the top club now a car park? My father worked in the local pits and we moved several times. At age 10 we moved back to ...Read more
A memory of Greasbrough in 1963 by
Our Early Life
We lived my Dad (Roly Inman) Mum (Topsy Inman) with me Michael, and Roger in Shotover up the rough lane off the road by the grass triangle and near the school. I remember Miss Swithenbank who used to teach and lived in ...Read more
A memory of Burley in Wharfedale in 1950 by
South Stifford And Grays
After my grandparents passed away the house was left to my father bill mercer.we lived at 64 Charlton street south stifford.I remember the cement works very well as I along with my friends peter Baldwin and Dave whitehead we ...Read more
A memory of Grays in 1964 by
Cullercoats Personal Links
My Nana Simpson (nee Brunton) was a fisherwoman who used to sell fish on the front from a creel on her back years before I was born. My Grandad contracted Polio in his 50's and Nana had to work hard long hours to ...Read more
A memory of Cullercoats in 1949 by
Rememberinggraysandrookhalldellroad
I wasn't born in Grays. In fact had a very disrupted childhood due to my father initially being in the army. However I spent one week at Quarry Hill Primary school at the end of the school year before moving to ...Read more
A memory of Grays in 1953 by
Harrowfield Boys School
In 1958 the school had a trip to Rome for the Olympics. We also had a week on the Foudroyant, a ship harboured in Portsmouth Harbour. Remember we rowed to the IoW in a Whaler, (I think).
A memory of Harold Hill by
Brought Up In 60's 70's
I lived with my mother and grandparents in a row of cottages near the station. we had no bathroom but used a tin bath once a week in the kitchen. We had an outside toilet and our water was spring water. my grandad ...Read more
A memory of Grindleford by
Memories Of Covenham As A Child
I was born in Covenham in Zeplin Row in 1950. I remember going to bed with candles as that was the only form of lighting we had. If it was cold in the winter I can remember my mum wraping up the warm oven ...Read more
A memory of Covenham St Mary in 1950 by
Eton Side Bridge House Hotel 1937
I believe this is still in operation as a hotel, to the left are the boathouses where the Eton rowing club was housed.
A memory of Windsor by
Captions
827 captions found. Showing results 481 to 504.
The man in the rowing boat appears to be getting ready to pull the yacht off.
Rows of neat cottages line the road; not far away, though not visible here, is the timber-framed St Mary's House.
Tom Rowe, the Lancashire cheese factor, lived at York House in Bilsborrow.
Market stalls became permanent over the years, and ended up as two complete rows of buildings. Here, a few street vendors have set out their stalls.
At Fairhaven, visitors could take their exercise pulling on the oars of a rowing boat or playing 18 holes on the local golf course.
Market stalls became permanent over the years, and ended up as two complete rows of buildings. Here, a few street vendors have set out their stalls.
Here, as we look downstream by the former ferry and towpath, working barges mingle with leisure rowing boats for hire.
An assortment of small fishing and rowing boats has been hauled safely above the high water mark in this picture of the eastern end of the Marine Parade; the famous white cliffs are visible beyond the
White House cottage to its right, at the end of Bunker's Row, has now been demolished.
The rowing boat in front of the lighthouse seems almost as fully laden as the motor launch 'Britannia' in the foreground!
Butchers Row is on the left. The Sydney Harper building is now a travel agent. Note that next door is another tradesman called Prideaux.
A wheeled jetty facilitates embarkation for a leisurely sail, whilst the more energetic take their exercise in a rowing boat.
The Deben Sailing Club and the Woodbridge Rowing Club from 1906 made it an annual event.
The very narrow Red Lion Street in Cropredy (pronounced Cropreedy) is named after the Red Lion Inn, seen half way along the row of houses on the right.
Judging by the rows of sweet jars on display in E W Winfield's Cash Stores, it must have been a popular shop with the local youngsters.
The river could be crossed by a rowing boat ferry, which replaced a Victorian steam ferry, after the Second World War.
Beyond the green there is a row of post-enclosure brick cottages.
Around the green are the older thatched cottages and (right) one partly thatched and slated farmhouse that has been extended on either side into two cottage rows.
The Swan Inn, beyond, closed in the 1930s and is now called Carisbrook. In the distance is a row of mock-Tudor cottages.
The whole row has now been replaced.
There is a splendid proportion of medieval and Tudor timber-framed houses; it is even more astonishing that the market infill between Middle Row and the High Street survived traffic imperatives.This view
Bailye the tailor has handed over the business to his relative Alec Johnson at No 1 Middle Row.
The smaller bridge to the right crosses the old boat slide, a weir bypass for rowing boats, an exciting and brief run down rollers from the upper river to the lower, and once common on the River Thames
The village has a wealth of old houses, including a row of Kentish weatherboard cottages flanking the side of the parish church.
Places (93)
Photos (711)
Memories (1283)
Books (0)
Maps (566)