Places
10 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,534 photos found. Showing results 421 to 440.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
8,172 memories found. Showing results 211 to 220.
Good Times
I lived at 14 oak street Chapel of Ease. I can remember the two estates being built and the bridge in the photo is also the way I went to school at the west end primary school. The red phone box is still there I believe, in the photo the ...Read more
A memory of Abercarn by
A Privilege To Grow Up Here!
I was born in 1961 in Thorpe Combe hospital in Walthamstow and brought up by my parents in Forest Edge Buckhurst Hill. I consider myself very privileged to have lived there for the first 26 years of my life and have ...Read more
A memory of Buckhurst Hill by
Toy Shop ?
I remember going into the toy shop in this block with my dad and buying my first doll with proper hair. Anyone rise remember it.
A memory of Bradford
Happy Days
I remember happy childhood holidays at Talacre. We would stay in a wooden chalet belonging to a friend of my Dad's. He would pick us up in his Ford Anglia, my dad would sit in the front. Then Mum, my sister Annette and myself would sit in ...Read more
A memory of Talacre by
Roundshaw
I lived on the Roundshaw estate through the 70's and have great memories of playing runouts. I knew every nook and cranny of that estate. I had many friends that lived on nearly every close. I lived in Wallington for nearly 20 years. I ...Read more
A memory of Wallington in 1975 by
1960s Shopping In Uxbridge Road, Hatch End
On the left of this view is the pub sign for the "Railway Hotel" - a popular drinking venue for older members of St Anselm's Youth Club and the Hatch End Young Conservatives! Next door is a garage ...Read more
A memory of Hatch End in 1965 by
Resident Of Malpas Road Just Off Wexham Road 1958 1970
I used the post office many times as a child and teenager. I started my first savings account in 1963 at Upton Lea post office and still have the original book with about 3 pounds 15 shillings on ...Read more
A memory of Slough by
Living Over A Chemist's Shop.
My name is Peter Seager-Thomas. The shop on the corner (LHS) was Shewells the Chemist. Mr Shewell and my father had studied together and whilst our future home was being built, in Upper Brighton Road, Mr Shewell put the ...Read more
A memory of Surbiton by
Bay Horse Pub.
I remember sitting on this wall taking car numbers and having an ice cream from the booth situated in the area to the side of the pub. Also the fish and chip shop. The ice-cream booth blew away in a storm and was never seen ...Read more
A memory of Green Hammerton by
The Junction Of Hogmoor Road And Oakhanger Road Opposite Bolley Avenue
On this corner, where there’s now a pair of detached bungalows built, there used to be in the 1960s/70s a purple/red tin building which was called The Penny Cafe. Further down ...Read more
A memory of Bordon by
Captions
3,478 captions found. Showing results 505 to 528.
On the right, the Royal Oak, the shop with the arched door and window, and the building nearest the camera, here Dolly's sweet shop, all remain.
It is now no longer an hotel, but shops with offices above.
The older corner shops, at one time serving locals with groceries and hardware, are even in 1955 being used for tourist attractions such as antiques.
The bold black-and-white half-timbering of G Sedgwick's draper and outfitters shop in the centre of the picture (the owners are proudly standing outside) is in marked contrast to the same shop which can
The ground floor shop windows have long since been completely modernised.
This is a comparatively modern scene in the High Street, showing two-way traffic and a variety of cars.
The Broadgate shopping precinct, a series of squares with shops on two levels, was an excellent idea, even if the finished product was dull.
Woolworth's (right) have occupied this shop since the 1950s. The shop used to be occupied by Rowland's, an ironmonger's, cabinetmaker's and furniture warehouse.
At its western end, between Shaftmoor Lane and Fox Hollies Road, there is a parade of early 20th-century shops, and opposite there is a late 20th-century supermarket.
E Clarke (right) was amongst the good family grocers in St Anne's, and the shop also sold to the hotels. G Benner & Company in the Square was another—it had a good motor delivery service.
Next is Robert Joy, draper and milliner (he also had the shop opposite), and then Bruno, baker and confectioner, with the large window on the first floor.
The shop, which closed in 1977, was in the gable wing. The beerhouse and shop were run together; the former was called the Peacock after the mother of the two sisters who sold it to the brewery.
International Stores became a butcher's shop in the 1970s, and by 1983 the site was Savory & Moore, the chemists. It is now a Savers shop.
This is the main shopping street through Woodhall Spa. There was a railway crossing across the street in the distance.
Of the shops on the right, the Midland Bank is now, of course, HSBC.
Here at number 28 we have Joseph Kennerley's drapery and hosiery shop, which also doubled as the post office.
At the top of the street stands an elegant 18th-century building housing the police station; on the near left, an outfitter's shop displays lengths of cloth.
The tailor's shop to the left was shortly taken over by Fells, Cycle & Wireless dealers (see W115023 on page 38-39), who also had premises in Norfolk Street, and until recently was Belfast's linen store
The Chandos Arms and the shops beyond are now 1970s offices, and on the right side of the road is Hampden House, a stylish but incongruous office block with shops on the ground floor.
Standing in front of a shop (now a private residence called Dial House), the sundial has been a prominent feature of Great Staughton since 1637.
Standing in front of a shop (now a private residence called Dial House), the sundial has been a prominent feature of Great Staughton since 1637.
An exception is the single-storey shops on the right, which have been replaced by a nasty three-storey flat-roofed 1960s building.
The uninspiring shops and flats on the left were built around 1960, while the shop on the right, a late Victorian building with mock timber-framing, is now empty (October 2001).
Trebilcock's shop is displaying the well-known brand of K shoes and boots.
Places (10)
Photos (2534)
Memories (8172)
Books (0)
Maps (71)