Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chatsworth House, Derbyshire
 - Osborne House, Isle of Wight
 - Brambletye House, Sussex
 - Ickworth House, Suffolk
 - Kingston Lacy House, Dorset
 - Boscobel House, Shropshire
 - Preshute House, Wiltshire
 - Bolton Houses, Lancashire
 - Brick Houses, Yorkshire
 - Quaking Houses, Durham
 - Water Houses, Yorkshire
 - Bottom House, Staffordshire
 - New House, Kent
 - Mite Houses, Cumbria
 - Lyneham House, Devon
 - Church Houses, Yorkshire
 - Dye House, Northumberland
 - Spittal Houses, Yorkshire
 - Street Houses, Yorkshire
 - Tow House, Northumberland
 - Halfway House, Shropshire
 - Halfway Houses, Kent
 - High Houses, Essex
 - Flush House, Yorkshire
 - White House, Suffolk
 - Wood House, Lancashire
 - Bank Houses, Lancashire
 - Lower House, Cheshire
 - Marsh Houses, Lancashire
 - Chapel House, Lancashire
 - Close House, Durham
 - Guard House, Yorkshire
 - Hundle Houses, Lincolnshire
 - Hundred House, Powys
 - Thorley Houses, Hertfordshire
 - School House, Dorset
 
Photos
7,776 photos found. Showing results 541 to 560.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 649 to 1.
Memories
10,360 memories found. Showing results 271 to 280.
The Raf Estate
We lived on the RAF estate in Ickenham during the late 1950s, in a semi-detached house at 14 Nettleton Road. Every RAF home mirrored the next; their furnishings were also identical. You could move from Scotland to England (which we had ...Read more
A memory of Ickenham in 1957 by
Summer Holidays
Browsing through the Book "I Remember when..." published by The Francis Frith Collection, I was so delighted to see a picture of The Quayside in 1896 at Salcombe, Devon. There standing proud above the quay was 'Harbour Lights', the ...Read more
A memory of Salcombe in 1890 by
Church House Farm
Has anyone any memory of this place? I would like to know where it was in Shelsey Walsh. Any info would be gratefully appreciated.
A memory of Shelsley Walsh in 1920
Childhood Holidays
I have happy memories of visiting Croston in the late 1940s-early 1950s. My aunt and uncle, Margaret and Bob Chisholme, lived in part of the Rectory for a few years before moving to a large, rambling house in Station Road next to ...Read more
A memory of Croston in 1947 by
Burrow Hill School
My name is Roger Hibbard from Staveley, Derbyshire, I was at Burrow Hill School from Easter 1952 to Easter 1953. I went there because at that time I suffered from severe asthma but I was never ill once during the wonderful ...Read more
A memory of Frimley Green in 1952 by
Growing Up In Earl Shilton
I have fond memories of Earl Shilton around the 1950s. My first school was in Wood Street where I lived in a little old cottage, now knocked down. I remember celebrating Queen Elizabeth II's coronation at the school, ...Read more
A memory of Earl Shilton in 1950 by
The First Families
We were one of the first families to move into St Mellons. My first momory was the smell of the building site and my mother taking me to Trowbridge nursery. I was knee deep in mud. And my mother still lives in the same house.
A memory of St Mellons by
Quarriers Were The Happiest Days Of My Life
My name is Elizabeth Bonner, but then it was Elizabeth Esnol. I lived in Cottage 3 with Agnes, the Mcdonalds and Anne, Margaret, and Josephine Murray, and Aunty Irene Munzy, Aunty Anne (House ...Read more
A memory of Quarriers Village in 1870 by
Sittingbourne To Australia
My name is Margaret. I was born in Park Road, Sittingbourne on 18.4.45. My parents were Flossie and Cyril Neaves. My dad worked as a machine man in the Sittingbourne paper mills and my mum worked fruit picking in the ...Read more
A memory of Sittingbourne in 1971 by
Willcoxs And Bennets And A Jones
Is there anyone out there who can help me with a family that I believe lived in Old Sodbury House at the 1901 census? At this time William Charles Willcox 52, lived with Mary J Jones 40, who later became Willcox. ...Read more
A memory of Old Sodbury in 1910 by
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Captions
6,977 captions found. Showing results 649 to 672.
To the left of the chapel is 'Glan Dyfi' house: formerly a school for young ladies and now known as Astral House, a branch of the RAF Association.
Branston, around its church, has delightful winding lanes; by the church stands Hainton House of 1765, a Georgian house of some dignity.
The large size of this Charnwood commuter village is hardly reflected in such an idyllic scene as this, a curving roadway with modest houses leading directly to the west door of the 13th-century church
Next to them is the drive to Medstead Manor House. It was built in 1905 by Edmund Purefoy Ellis Jervoise, but by 1915 Lady Bradford was living there.
Most of the houses on the right were still private houses.
The tall house in the distance is Twyford House; John Bunyan once stayed in an earlier building on the site. During the First World War, it was a hostel for female munitions workers.
These two timber-framed houses were originally built for prosperous farmers; in Victorian times the houses were each subdivided into labourers' cottages for the Leconfield Estate.
The bank on the left was built as a private house in 1649, and the Cabin public house was built in 1930-31.
Large 19th-century houses line the road on the far side of the Common on Chaters Hill. In the grass on this side of the house on the right lies the mediaeval maze.
This is a fine house, dated 1725, but with an older inner core. Now a home for the elderly, its main frontage has gabled end wings and a central porch.
Near the end of Hiltingbury Road, and on a comer with a new Ashdown Road, a public house called the Tabby Cat was built and thrived for some time.
Both the house and lodge are roofed in local Norfolk reed, known throughout the land as the best material for this purpose.
A young girl with a pram stands outside the gates and vanished lodge house of Cane Hill Hospital, built in 1883.
The original house was built by George Sitwell in 1625, much of which survives, though absorbed by the extensive rebuilding work carried out by Sitwell Sitwell in the late 18th century.
The garden in the foreground is that of a house aptly named Arrow Bank, a beautifully situated house now used for a bed and breakfast business.
The houses on the right back onto the Ouse. The old house with the parapet gable (right) has been divided into three cottages - one is a shop.
The Lodge, a house dating from about 1500, belongs to the National Trust and houses Axbridge Museum. It takes its name from a carved king's head on the corner, the sign of the King's Head Inn.
These old houses are to be found in the shadow of Tattershall Castle and next to the collegiate church of the Holy Trinity.
Between 1900 and 1905 Vickers built Vickerstown on Walney Island, an estate to house shipyard workers.
Weston House and its grounds were sold by the Harrison family to the Corporation in 1873, the house itself being converted into a museum; the Mappin Art Gallery was added in 1887.
The Chelmsford & Essex Museum, too, was housed here before the more capacious Oaklands House became available in 1929.
The sign in the background reads 'This House For Sale' - a restrained version of the estate agent's notices of today.
Dartmoor Prison at Princetown was built in 1806, initially to house French prisoners of war.
Crickhowell House originally opened in 1993 and has, since 1999, played temporary host to the National Assembly whilst the greatly delayed new debating chamber is constructed.
Places (80)
Photos (7776)
Memories (10360)
Books (1)
Maps (370)

