Photos
2 photos found. Showing results 501 to 2.
Maps
31 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 601 to 2.
Memories
638 memories found. Showing results 251 to 260.
60s A Time Of Change
I lived in Southall ( west ave ) until the company my father worked for ( Cramic Eng ) moved to Oxfordshire. I and my two brothers went to Tudor road primary where in my year we were joined by Surinda Pal one of the first Sikh ...Read more
A memory of Southall by
War Years
Ths is the memory of my cousin, Audrey, aged 79. We were talking yesterday and she told me how, with her mother, she had travelled from Lancashire to see her father who was stationed in the area. They had to get permission to travel ...Read more
A memory of Dibden Purlieu in 1943 by
Drakeholes, Gatehouses
Drakeholes is a great little spot on the Chesterfield Canal. Famous for its tunnel and the White Swan pub, or "Mucky Duck" as it was once known. Above the tunnel sat two small derelict Gatehouses, once the grand entrance to ...Read more
A memory of Drakeholes
Footbridge Over The Canal
I recall the day the iron footbridge was lowered into place over the canal. I'm probably wrong but I think it was lowered into its position by a huge crane, how they got it to the bridge I've no idea. Have I dreamt this ...Read more
A memory of Carnforth in 1945 by
Fishing In The Stort Neil Riley
I was 6 years old when I first went fishing at Sawbridgeworth. We lived in Sayesbury Road from 1948 to 1960 and at the back of our house was Chalk Farm, where I spent a lot of time playing football with the farmer's ...Read more
A memory of Sawbridgeworth by
The Happy Times
My name is Peter Russell was born at 61 Woodlands Road 1937 and enjoyed all my young life in Southall until I moved to Waterlooville near Portsmouth in 1961, I went to Beaconsfield Rd I/J school and then onto Featherstone Rd ...Read more
A memory of Southall by
Brentford 1961 Part One
In 1961 I started work at Heathrow, and within three weeks was transferred to the new Turriff Building on the Great West Road. The canteen was on the tenth floor. Imagine having a subsidised lunch and looking out over ...Read more
A memory of Brentford in 1961 by
Burslem Baths And The Wright's Pie Shop After (Top Of Nile St)
My memories start around 1946 and go on 'forever' - but the years I want to mention here are those of my Cobridge schooldays and the Burslem connection to those schooldays. I lived on the ...Read more
A memory of Burslem in 1946 by
Bude In The 1950s.
I remember the primary school and the little banks behind it which seemed huge to us then! We used to go mussel picking on the rocks and walk along the downs with buttercups and daisies, sadly now much reduced due to soil erosion. The ...Read more
A memory of Bude in 1956 by
Brentford Arriving By Bike Along The Canal.
I am cycling along the canal and have just passed under the railway bridge. I pass under the great metal warehouse. Quickly there is a rattle as I cross the little bridge by the gauging lock, which is ...Read more
A memory of Brentford in 1961 by
Captions
756 captions found. Showing results 601 to 624.
The bridge in our picture was erected when the river was diverted to form part of the Ship Canal in 1894.
Our photographer is standing on the bridge over the lock which separates the dock from the Lancaster Canal basin.
The Kennet & Avon was a working canal when this picture was taken. Today, the only boats you will see are recreational ones.
This is probably the longest-lived operational horse-drawn trip boat on the canal system.
New Canal street commemorates one of the many open waterways which ran through the medieval streets until the 19th century.
The Leeds/Liverpool Canal and the railway both increased access to new markets across the Pennines and down to the south.
The two Bittell Reservoirs, the Worcester and Birmingham Canal and some pleasant countryside are all just a short stroll away for the lane`s residents.
This development, of course, meant the demise of the canals.
A ditch ran alongside the building until the 1850s, which was intended to link Southampton with the Andover Canal and the River Test.
In the first year of operation, goods weighing 76,000 tons were carried on the canal. Salt is still mined here from huge underground caves.
There were two canal and tunnel systems, one set higher than the other. Linked by an inclined plane on a 1 in 4 gradient, the boats were carried between levels on a rail-mounted cradle.
At the time this photograph was taken, Ulverston was still a busy commercial port linked to the River Leven by the Ulverston Canal.
This village is less well known than the prodigious Grand Junction Canal tunnel that emerges just to the south.
The Red Lion Inn shown here at the centre of the picture survives where others, such as the Bell (on the left) have not; public houses sprang up alongside the canal route which opened to great national
The Chesterfield Canal begins at the distant hump-backed bridge beyond a moored motor cruiser. The 'Trent Valley Way' long-distance footpath stretches from here to beyond Nottingham.
The canal was closed, except for the Bude section, in 1891.
The village of Braunston lies on a hill overlooking a picturesque stretch of the Grand Union Canal, one of Britain's most famous inland waterways.
This is where the Worcester and Birmingham Canal was joined to the River Severn in 1815.
Sited beside the main north road, the pub has always been a busy place, with the canal and, later, the railway also bringing their trade. The former nearby station took the name of Roebuck.
Carnforth's industries of sand and gravel extraction and iron smelting depended upon the Lancaster Canal and later the railway, when an important junction between the north-south and east-west
The intended junction for the Staffs & Worcs Canal and the River Severn was to have been at Bewdley, but the locals objected.
Just a few minutes walk from here, the Leeds & Liverpool Canal links up with the River Aire and the Aire & Calder Navigation, providing Leeds with an inland waterway from the Mersey to the Humber
In the early 19th century, the colliery at Brereton nearby was connected by rail to a wharf, which enabled coal to be transported along the Trent and Mersey canal.
Bypassed by the Bridgewater canal, the cobbled village centre has retained much of its quaint atmosphere. Perhaps Frith's photographer sought refreshment at the imposing sandstone Ram's Head Hotel.
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