Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- The Norfolk Broads, Norfolk
- Oulton Broad, Suffolk
- Broad Haven, Dyfed (near Little Haven)
- Broad Chalke, Wiltshire
- Hatfield Broad Oak, Essex
- Broad Hinton, Wiltshire
- Broad Ings, Yorkshire (near Pocklington)
- Broad Oak, Dyfed
- Felindre, Dyfed (near Broad Oak)
- Broad Marston, Hereford & Worcester
- Broad Oak, Cumbria (near Ravenglass)
- Broad's Green, Essex
- Broad Oak, Merseyside
- Broad Parkham, Devon
- Broad Blunsdon, Wiltshire
- Broad Green, Bedfordshire
- Broad Heath, Staffordshire
- Broad Hill, Cambridgeshire
- Broad Town, Wiltshire
- Broad Water, Gwynedd
- Broad Colney, Hertfordshire
- Broad Oak, Devon
- Broad Street, Wiltshire
- Broad Clough, Lancashire
- Broad Ford, Kent
- Broad Green, Merseyside
- Broad Lane, Cornwall
- Broad Lanes, Shropshire
- Broad Street, Suffolk
- Broad Street, Sussex
- Broad's Green, Wiltshire
- Broad Campden, Gloucestershire
- Broad Green, Cambridgeshire
- Broad Heath, Powys
- Broad Layings, Hampshire
- Broad Oak, Shropshire
Photos
1,205 photos found. Showing results 41 to 60.
Maps
381 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 49 to 4.
Memories
586 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Gregory Road 1950 60
I lived in Gregory road from1953-1071 well remember the greyhound track and norward farm diaries. Used to come out of George tomlinsons school and dash into the woodyarc and grab as much wood as be could grab before we got caught.
A memory of Southall by
Top End Of Station Road
Has not changed much over time - apart from the loss of the old oak tree.
A memory of Wilburton by
Bomb Crater At The Bottom Of Ramillies Road
We moved to 52 Worcester Crescent, Mill Hill early in 1939 not long before the outbreak of the war. I am now 83 but I can clearly remember the bomb crater at the bottom of Ramillies Road. If you come ...Read more
A memory of Mill Hill by
Graces Road
My Mother was born in Graces Road in Aug 1893 in her parents house with her eight Bros/Sisters until she married my father in 1918, on leave from France. In 1920 they moved to Green Lane, Thornton Heath. I was Born in 1930. On special ...Read more
A memory of Camberwell by
Wembley High Road
I grew up in Wembley, late 60’s to early 80’s. used to hang around the high road a lot . Who remembers a trendy shop called Screws ,it had like a coffee/cafeteria downstairs anc a record booth that you could listen to before you bought ...Read more
A memory of Wembley by
Wightman Road
I was born in England and lived at 399 Wightman Road for seven years of my life from 1961 t0 1968. My parents were poor immigrants from Jamaica, W.I. Our family consisted of myself, my sister, my brother and my parents. I remember our ...Read more
A memory of Hornsey in 1961 by
The Wonder Shops Of Plumstead Road
When I was a teenager back in the late 1950's I loved travelling by trollybus to explore Woolwich. At the time I lived at home in Welling but Woolwich always had much more of interest to offer. There was the endless ...Read more
A memory of Woolwich by
Berwick Road C Of E School
I started at Berwick Road C of E School in 1957 together with some of the people referred to in the other memories ie: Heather Wallis, Christopher Bennior, Lorraine Staton. There were others obviously such as Margot ...Read more
A memory of Little Sutton in 1957 by
Ilderton Road
I became a Bermondsey boy after moving from a prefab where I was born in the big snow in 1947. We lived at 14 Caulfield Road, Peckham, just around the corner from Jordans Dairy in Lugard Road s.e.15. (The last dairy farm in London). I ...Read more
A memory of Bermondsey by
Davidson Road School
Does anyone remember Davidson Road Secondary Modern School? This was late 1950's pre co-education days so although housed in the same building, girls were upstairs and boys downstairs. Seperate playgrounds and 'never the twain ...Read more
A memory of Croydon in 1958 by
Captions
453 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
Woodland surrounds many of the broads in the upper stretches of the Bure, providing shelter and seclusion for these early cabin cruisers.
To the east are clear views to the broad peninsula of Dungeness.
Sidmouth nestles in a broad valley where the pastoral countryside of East Devon sweeps down to the sea.
Here the stream runs through the broad green in the centre.
Its broad, spacious street is fringed with brick and weatherboarded cottages in the Wealden style.
The broad signboards still squats awkwardly over the first-floor bay windows.
Many come to admire the broad village green, the leafy lanes and nearby woodland.
Arnold Roy spotted the need for provisioning the Broads tourist industry early, and his story is a classic errand boy to shopping magnate story.
Below Wroxham, the River Bure flows between several broads that form wonderful boating lakes.
Broad Street is the town's most fashionable shopping street, though the busy traffic of today prevents dogs lying down in the road!
A sailing barge, once a common sight on the Broads and Norfolk rivers, is moored opposite the pleasure boats below the yacht station.
Wroxham is at the western gateway to the Broads, and profited greatly from the late 19th-century boom in 'messing about in boats'.
Teignmouth is the second-oldest seaside resort in Devon; it has attracted visitors from the middle of the 18th century.
Teignmouth is the second-oldest seaside resort in Devon; it has attracted visitors from the middle of the 18th century.
Running above the course of the Flete brook, this broad street, now one of Torquay's premiere shopping malls, was constructed in 1865 to replace the narrow lane of slums and fishermen's cottages that originally
The Georgian coaching-inn, the Swan Hotel, dominates the street.
Note how the dark ashlar is picked out by severe white mortaring.The broad signboards still squats awkwardly over the first-floor bay windows.
Somerton was once a thriving medieval town with fairs, markets, trade and inns.
The broad signboards still squats awkwardly over the first-floor bay windows.
Arnold Roy spotted the need for provisioning the Broads tourist industry early, and his story is a classic errand boy to shopping magnate story.
Below Wroxham, the River Bure flows between several broads that form wonderful boating lakes.
Across the broad expanse of the High Street is the portico of the Town Hall, which was rebuilt in 1790.
This colossal building, once home of the controversial Greater London Council, was designed by Ralph Knott and begun in 1912.
The young coxswain in the skiff has misjudged her three-point turn, and is wedged between the quayside and the cruiser.
Places (63)
Photos (1205)
Memories (586)
Books (4)
Maps (381)