Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Muir Woods, USA
 - Wood Green, Greater London
 - Paddock Wood, Kent
 - Ashurst Wood, Sussex
 - Petts Wood, Greater London (near Orpington)
 - Hinchley Wood, Surrey
 - Bishop's Wood, Hereford & Worcester (near Ross-on-Wye)
 - Cousley Wood, Sussex
 - Wood's Green, Sussex
 - Cannock Wood, Staffordshire
 - The Wood, Shropshire (near Wem)
 - Wood's Corner, Sussex
 - Wood, Dyfed
 - Wood, Somerset
 - Baker's Wood, Buckinghamshire
 - Booth Wood, Yorkshire
 - Bishops Wood, Staffordshire
 - Prees Wood, Shropshire
 - Codsall Wood, Staffordshire
 - Gipton Wood, Yorkshire
 - Harold Wood, Essex
 - Higham Wood, Kent
 - Holt Wood, Dorset
 - Renshaw Wood, Shropshire
 - Ticket Wood, Devon
 - Radmore Wood, Staffordshire
 - Wollerton Wood, Shropshire
 - Wood Bevington, Warwickshire
 - Wood End, Hertfordshire
 - Wood Green, Norfolk
 - Wood Lane, Shropshire
 - Wood Norton, Norfolk
 - Edzell Woods, Grampian
 - Gustard Wood, Hertfordshire
 - Lyneal Wood, Shropshire
 - Knowl Wood, Yorkshire
 
Photos
1,098 photos found. Showing results 461 to 480.
Maps
789 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 553 to 4.
Memories
2,407 memories found. Showing results 231 to 240.
Maes Y Llan Where I First Lived
These houses are in Maes-y-llan.My father Den and mother Hilda Wildblood with my sister Anne were the first to live in Number 6 when the houses were built in 1948 I believe.I was born in 1954 and it was my first home and ...Read more
A memory of Meifod in 1955 by
Family Day Out Clerkenwell To Caterham 1925
The above photo depicts Dorothy Connor (nee Step) aged 10, with her late Mother Elizabeth Step (aged 46) and her Sister, Florence Step (aged 21) having alighted from the 159a Bus which brought them from their ...Read more
A memory of Caterham by
My First And Last Jobs In Hull
This is a photo of the Derringham Branch of the Hull Savings Bank where I started as a junior bank clerk at the age of 16 on 31st August 1965, probably around the time when this photo was taken. It certainly ...Read more
A memory of Kingston upon Hull in 1965 by
My Early Years In Salford
I was born in Salford, at 15 School Street in 1951. My first school was Stowells Memorial, I think the headmistress was a Miss Dent. There was a butchers shop one the corner with the same name as our family, but I don't think ...Read more
A memory of Salford in 1951 by
Reminiscing
I was born in NW London. My first visit to Woburn Sands was about 1950 when my Uncle Ted and Aunt Ada moved here. They lived at the 'Dene' Aspley Hill. Aunt Ada did the housework for Mrs Russell the owner of the 'Dene' and my uncle ...Read more
A memory of Woburn Sands in 1950 by
Holmwood School Pupil.
I have many memories of my time at Holmwood School. I joined as a day boy in 1968, when the Headmaster was David Glass and I left around 1973 when the Headmaster was Johnny Clegg. I remember the trips we had in the old school bus ...Read more
A memory of Formby in 1968 by
Eric Smith''''s Greengrocer''''s 21 Lordship Lane Se22
My Dad, Eric Smith, opened a Greengrocer's shop at number 21 Lordship Lane in 1962. At that time there was a traditional butchers shop one side and a grocery shop the other side. Opposite was a piano ...Read more
A memory of Dulwich in 1962 by
Ackroyd Coffee Bar
Just down the road from the Shoulder of Mutton pub was Ackroyds coffee bar. In the 60s we young ones would meet, listen to the juke box, drinking frothy coffee. The horse and cart outside the pub belonged to Herman Wood the local milkman. The cart was a daily sight outside the pub.
A memory of Clayton West in 1966 by
Happy Days In Thorne Park
Happy days in the paddling pool and on the swings, the old parkie taking your name for riding your bike in the park, what did he do with all the names? Remembrance Day in the park in 1963 as a cub, Mr Metcalf leading us. Church ...Read more
A memory of Thorne in 1962 by
Living With Nanny
I remember well living with my nanny in Neames Forstell, she was Rose Beake, a formidable lady, but oh how I loved her. I remember going to Selling school, and if it rained or snowed being brought home in the police car by Sargeant ...Read more
A memory of Selling in 1954 by
Captions
663 captions found. Showing results 553 to 576.
The wooded skyline above the town extends from Rhode Barton and Thistle Hill to Penn Hill and Timber Hill.
The village, seen from Okeford Hill with Piddles Wood beyond (left), was estate-owned until April 1966, when it was auctioned by Sturminster Newton estate agent Arthur Richards.
Looking East from Wood Street An inn has stood on this site for 400 years.
Located in a remote region north of Petworth, the village was originally formed in a clearing in the woods. The local wealden clay district is remarkable for large oak trees.
On the extreme right is Wood Bros, wine merchants, and above the shop there were two flats, both rented at one time by BBC trainee engineers and their fami- lies.
This village is noted for its beautiful woods, a railway tunnel under the Balcombe Forest and a brick viaduct over the Ouse valley. The church of St Mary was built in 1847.
The Assheton Arms, an old coaching inn, is at the bottom of Long Street, with the Williams Deacons and Salford Bank, designed by Edgar Wood, to its right.
Nowadays the ponds are owned by the National Trust, along with Frensham Common with its pine woods and heaths, and they are still as much a major tourist attraction as they were in the 1960s.
A mile or so south of Quorn, the camera looks north towards the weir, with Hawcliff Hill and Buddon Wood to the left.
Before the birth of theme parks, a day out in the late 1950s (when comparatively few people owned a car) was by Midland Red bus to Groby Pool, Swithland Woods and Bradgate Park, with the
Beyond the thick wooded cover, the more open land of the deer park is corrugated by the medieval ridge and furrow of open field cultivation.
Over the ensuing five years he also enriched the interior with a riot of colour, featuring painted wood, stone, glass and tiles.
Beyond the thick wooded cover, the more open land of the deer park is corrugated by the medieval ridge and furrow of open field cultivation.
The plainer frontage of Roberts' shoe shop is followed by the protruding shop windows of Hancock and Wood, shielded by sun awnings. Next comes the National Provincial Bank (now demolished).
Hancock & Wood and Roberts shoe shop are almost all that remain of this 1950s scene.
The three-gabled house on the right, Hartshorne House or the Old Hospital, 15th-century and 1576, was described in 1863 as 'an unsightly pile of wood and plaster too dilapidated to allow the lowest to
Over the ensuing five years he also enriched the interior with a riot of colour, featuring painted wood, stone, glass and tiles.
Cheesden Brook passes under Ashworth Road, flowing to the right to join Naden Brook as it leaves Carr, Gelder and Bamford Woods.
Located in a remote region north of Petworth, the village was originally formed in a clearing in the woods. The local wealden clay district is remarkable for large oak trees.
The Frith photographer's desire to take views of post offices has led him to ignore the beautifully-situated village centre around its green and also the good 1879 church, designed, built and
The scene is more wooded now.
Inside there are elaborate wood and stone carvings, a hammer-beam roof and a modern altar-screen, which is a war memorial.
Born in the village was the 'mouse man', wood carver and furniture maker Robert Thompson (1876-1955). His intricate carvings can be seen in churches across the world.
The awful height of the fissure which the bridge bestrides a hundred feet above the observer, rendered doubly gloomy by its narrowness, and the wood which overhangs it; the stunning noise of the torrent
Places (165)
Photos (1098)
Memories (2407)
Books (4)
Maps (789)

