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
- Church Houses, Yorkshire
- High Houses, Essex
- Dye House, Northumberland
- Flush House, Yorkshire
- Halfway House, Shropshire
- Halfway Houses, Kent
- Mite Houses, Cumbria
- Lyneham House, Devon
- Spittal Houses, Yorkshire
- Street Houses, Yorkshire
- New House, Kent
- White House, Suffolk
- Tow House, Northumberland
- Wood House, Lancashire
- Beck Houses, Cumbria
- Carr Houses, Merseyside
- Stone House, Cumbria
- Swain House, Yorkshire
- Smithy Houses, Derbyshire
- Spacey Houses, Yorkshire
- Keld Houses, Yorkshire
- Kennards House, Cornwall
- Heath House, Somerset
- Hey Houses, Lancashire
Photos
7,766 photos found. Showing results 541 to 560.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 649 to 1.
Memories
10,342 memories found. Showing results 271 to 280.
Error And My Memory/Memories Of Sonning Common...
Not sure if it is an error, but 'Brinnds Corner' is spelt 'B-R-I-N-D-S C-O-R-N-E-R' after the butchers shop, (now an off-licence), on the corner of Peppard Road/Wood Lane and Brinds Close which was ...Read more
A memory of Sonning Common by
Looking Back At My Life Growing Up, And Working In Fareham Plus More.
Leaving Southampton Road School in 1954, I started working on the outskirts of Titchfield for Sanders & Sons in their tomato glass houses, which was a good working start for me. ...Read more
A memory of Fareham by
Lulu In West Molesey
I lived in West Molesey, as a schoolboy in the 1960s. Around 1967, Lulu attended a party at the house of one of my friends. She lost an earring at the party, and went back the next morning to find it. I happened to be there at ...Read more
A memory of West Molesey by
I Was In Hutton Poplars Childrens Home.
From the age of 3 until I was 15 years of age I was in Hutton poplars I was in Humber House Mr and Mrs Healy were in charge. I then after some years in Humber House was transferred to Windermere House with Mr and ...Read more
A memory of Shenfield
Great Kingshill 1968 1982
Hi we moved to Great Kingshill in 1968 from Edmonton in N London. We also lived in Wood Green N. London. I remember my first impression of our new surrounds were not great. I suppose moving from London to a village in ...Read more
A memory of Great Kingshill by
Whiteheath Gate
I remember as a child visiting my Aunt and Uncle, Nellie and Ernie Cutler, they used to run a pub back in the forties and fifties I believe. For many years I have searched to find any mention of them around the Rowley ...Read more
A memory of Whiteheath Gate
Memories Of Sutton Lodge, In Sutton Lane—Just South Of The Great West Road, Heston/Hounslow
Recorded by Nicholas Reid, Canberra, Australia. I was christened in the Anglican church at Heston in 1959, though for obvious reason I don’t have any memories of ...Read more
A memory of Heston by
Southall Memories
My parents, who came to England from India in 1955, when I was 3 months old, moved to Southall in 1959, from Whitton, when I was 4. I remember Southall Broadway at that time-there was actually a saddlery business there! C. Quinion, ...Read more
A memory of Southall by
School Days And After
I lived on the Shelley estate at 12 Crispsey Avenue and went to the primary school in Ongar town near the town hall. Later I went to the new primary school on the Shelley estate on Milton Crescent. On the Moreton Road was a ...Read more
A memory of Chipping Ongar by
1960s Church Street And Mum's Family
My Mum's sister and her husband, in the late 50s, took up residence in the Vicarage on the corner of Church Street and Fitizalan Road ( now Claridge House Retirement home. ) His name was Rev Phillip Barry, and ...Read more
A memory of Littlehampton by
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Captions
6,977 captions found. Showing results 649 to 672.
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.
A young girl with a pram stands outside the gates and vanished lodge house of Cane Hill Hospital, built in 1883.
The house on the right is Kenwood, which has its entrance in Corfe View Road. Immediately behind is Eaton Hall in Highmoor Road.
Easily the most famous and most photographed building in Ambleside is Bridge House, a tiny one-up, one-down house constructed on a bridge over the Stock Beck.
In the centre the church stands above the distant houses. Note the house to the centre right: the road has been built up here, and the entrance is now below road level.
Here we have a closer view of the house on the crossroads before going down Mill Hill. It has a varied brick pattern for the walls, mullion windows and a tiled roof.
The house has now completely gone, and the lands are occupied by a new and very pleasant housing estate. Thre name survives, however, as the estate is called Henshall Hall Drive.
The original house on Holme Island was built by John Fitchett of Warrington in 1832.
This pretty house sits back away from the road, and is the Warden's house for the Girl Guides Camping Ground.
Beyond the slipway (centre) are the open doors of the new lifeboat station, built in 1984 and housing the Spirit of Derbyshire, a Mersey Class boat capable of 16 knots and with a range of 145 nautical
The effect of the new bridge on housing nearby can be seen in this photograph.
The house facing the green was the Bedford's pied-a-terre from 1550-1910. The quoins are of re-used abbey stone, and the stone slate roofs came from Colleyweston in Northamptonshire.
The large house next to Lloyds Bank was once a doctor's surgery, and it is now a public house known as the Inn on the Green.
An estate village of Hollycombe, a Tudor- style house of c1900. Chapel Common has a quaint 16th-century chapel in a wood, with a new church of St Luke built nearby in 1878.
Hailed by architects, planners and sociologists as being one of the country's most significant housing schemes, Park Hill won the Department of Environment Design in Housing Award in 1967.
Bishop Lloyd's House dates from 1615 and God's Provident House from 1652, though the latter was rebuilt in 1892 in the traditional style, using many original timbers.
The building nearest to the camera, Rainsford House, was built around the turn of the century.
The building immediately behind the lamp standard is known as John Knox's house. Dating from the 16th century, the house is said to have been built by Mary, Queen of Scots' goldsmith.
In Cheap Street is the Conduit, originally situated in the cloisters of Sherborne Abbey and used as a washing house, or lavatorium.
Gonville and Caius College is on the left, along with James Gibbs' elegant Senate House, where students are awarded their degrees.
Chagford's striking octagonal Market House was built in 1862. An earlier Market House collapsed in 1618, killing ten people who were attending the Stannary Court.
Robert de Gloucester founded a Cistercian monastery here in 1147; its grounds are now mostly occupied by the mansion house, but the choir and the chapter house remain.
Melbury House, the home of Lord Ilchester, was built in the 15th and 16th centuries, and was substantially enlarged in the 17th century.
This house was built in the 1850s. Parts of the estate, some 571 acres, were being offered as building plots by 1920, and were sold to developers by 1935.
Places (80)
Photos (7766)
Memories (10342)
Books (1)
Maps (370)