Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Ottery St Mary, Devon
- St Mary's, Isles of Scilly
- Holmbury St Mary, Surrey
- St Mary's Bay, Kent (near New Romney)
- Port St Mary, Isle of Man
- St Mary Bourne, Hampshire
- Buckland St Mary, Somerset
- Tedburn St Mary, Devon
- Chadwell St Mary, Essex
- Week St Mary, Cornwall
- Wisbech St Mary, Cambridgeshire
- St Mary Cray, Greater London
- Trimley St Mary, Suffolk
- Seavington St Mary, Somerset
- St Mary's Platt, Kent
- Rockland St Mary, Norfolk
- Adhurst St Mary, Hampshire
- Down St Mary, Devon
- Bow, Devon (near Down St Mary)
- Kingston St Mary, Somerset
- Donhead St Mary, Wiltshire
- Stoke St Mary, Somerset
- St Mary's, Northumberland
- Lowton St Mary's, Greater Manchester
- Ramsey St Mary's, Cambridgeshire
- St Mary's, Isle of Man
- St Mary's, Orkney Islands
- Codford St Mary, Wiltshire
- Creeting St Mary, Suffolk
- Collaton St Mary, Devon
- Pulham St Mary, Norfolk
- Hinton St Mary, Dorset
- Stratford St Mary, Suffolk
- Blandford St Mary, Dorset
- Clyst St Mary, Devon
- St Mary Hoo, Kent
Photos
4,838 photos found. Showing results 521 to 540.
Maps
302 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
660 memories found. Showing results 261 to 270.
Mary, Christine And Barbara's Summer Holidays.
Our grandparents, Arnold and Hilda Shea lived in Gargrave from 1935. He worked for Johnson and Johnson, I think he was an engineer. We three girls were born and lived in London. Every summer we would be ...Read more
A memory of Gargrave by
Mayo Road........Saunders Family/Jenkinson Family, 1950s/60s
I was born in Park Royal hospital on a hot July day in 1957 and was taken home to Mayo Road, where almost our entire family lived at numbers 46, 53 and 56. I was christened at St Mary's church, on ...Read more
A memory of Willesden by
1937 Onwards
Born in Oakwood Rd Hilsea In 1937with memories of watching Dog Fights in the sky from our Anderson Air Raid shelter during the early part of WW2 before going up to Dunstaffnage in Scotland in 1943 when my father who was a Shipwright in ...Read more
A memory of Portsmouth by
Family
My family on both my mother and father's side at one time came from Whitchurch. My gran and great granny were born there. My great granny never left the town in all of her 92 years,she died in 1948 after having 11 children. Looking at these ...Read more
A memory of Whitchurch by
50 Penrhiwceiber Road
I lived at no 50 just 2 doors down from st Winifred’ s church from 1944 to 1964. My mother was Stella Jeffery and my grandparents Mona and Charles (Jeff) Jeffery who was a dentist and had his surgery at No 50. Does anyone ...Read more
A memory of Penrhiwceiber by
Eunice Smith Memories
My family the Smiths lived at Pollocks cottages down the Faggs road and when I was born in 1942 we lived there till about 1950 when we moved to the houses opposite where the fire station is now because of the building of the ...Read more
A memory of Bedfont by
Barnes 1960s
I was so lucky to grow up in Barnes and haven't moved far away at all. We live in Sheen now so we still spend a lot of time in Barnes. Our family christenings, weddings and funerals were in St Mary's and I was a Brownie and attended ...Read more
A memory of Barnes by
Recollections Of Ash Vale By Lt Col Taylor
RECOLLECTIONS OF ASH VALE By Lt Col Taylor Ash Vale, viewed from the main route through it the Frimley and Ash Vale roads would not have appeared to alter a lot during the last 100 years. Houses do now ...Read more
A memory of Ash Vale by
Unforgivable Memories At St. Mary's, Broadstairs
Maiden name Sandra Banbury. As far as I know I was admitted to St Mary’s for convalescence following pneumonia, early fifties, and 4- 5 yrs old. Dr Fuller paid £4.4 s weekly, no idea for how long. ...Read more
A memory of Broadstairs by
Captions
842 captions found. Showing results 625 to 648.
As we move further west, we see a part of St Mary's Street with an interesting mix of buildings with alleys leading down to the river front and The Meadows.
The St Mary's we see here was only a few years old, and is possibly the sixth church on the site. The 1898 version was completely destroyed in a wartime air raid, along with much of the town centre.
Pleasington Priory, a Roman Catholic church dedicated to St Mary and John the Baptist and built in 1819, is set on a hill on Pleasington Lane, close to the River Dunsop and Witton Park, Blackburn.
Billingshurst is a Roman settlement on Stane Street. St Mary's church, built on a mound with access to the churchyard via a causeway, is shown in the photograph, and has Roman bricks in the walls.
By 1931, the redevelopment of St Mary's Square was complete. The river to the east of the church has been widened and landscaped, and bridges built to the north and south of the Churchyard.
Looking at this view, it is difficult to envisage the hamlet of Keninton mentioned in the Feet of Fines in 1232.
St Mary's church, here without a tower, became a church centre in the late 1980s. The post office and adjoining house remain, but there have been many changes since 1960.
There is no mention of a church here at the time of Domesday, although there was woodland for 100 pigs.
The church of St Lawrence originally belonged to the Abbey of St Mary at York and income from it was used to support the Priory at Wetheral.
A small village on minor roads near to the Surrey border.The church of St Mary Magdalene has two historic 14th-century brasses.
Prominent for many miles, St Mary's has dominated the hill since at least the 12th century. It has always been an extremely important church as a peculiar of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
In 1066, William, Duke of Normandy, having landed at Pevensey to claim the English throne from King Harold, marched here and built a timber castle.
One of the oldest surviving fragments in the town, this 12th-century arch now forms the entrance to St Mary's Passage, a narrow path running down towards the meadows.
A nearby vantage point at Combe hill is 638 feet high. The village church of St Mary's is an Early English building with an ancient chest and coffin.
One of Newent's present day tourist attractions is the Shambles, a museum of Victorian life that has its entrance in Church Street, a little way up on the left in this picture.
This is St Mary's parish church in South Street, seen from the north-east.
Much of 18th-century Stamford's trade came from its location on the Great North Road, and it had numerous coaching inns.
A postman on his round chats to two local residents opposite the King's Head pub (right), where empty barrels and several crates of bottles await collection by the brewer's dray.
The abbey was founded in AD670 as a nunnery by Sexburga, widow of Ercombert, King of Kent; the original building was burnt by the Danes.
THE CHURCH of St Mary the Virgin is a Grade I listed building of cruciform plan. Much of it is in Perpendicular style (although Norman features remain), and there are later additions.
St Mary's Church sits at the end of a little lane off the A34. A 14th-century building, it has a strange pew perched up on the wall 'like an opera box'. It also has two rather precious books.
Castle Street is 'the finest Georgian street in Cornwall', according to Sir John Betjeman, who knew a thing or two about the county.
Castle Street is 'the finest Georgian street in Cornwall', according to Sir John Betjeman, who knew a thing or two about the county.
The mid 12th-century Great Hall of Robert le Bossu survives in Castle Yard; up to modern times it has been in use as an Assizes Court and Crown Court.
Places (68)
Photos (4838)
Memories (660)
Books (0)
Maps (302)