Places

4 places found.

Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Photos

26 photos found. Showing results 41 to 26.

Books

Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.

Memories

69 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.

Lawson And Wards Shoe Factory

I lived in Barrow upon Soar. I left school in about July 1966 and in September 1966 I turned 15 and started work at Lawson and Wards. My grandma Violet Smith also worked there. My grandma and grandad, Violet and Wilf ...Read more

A memory of Sileby in 1966 by Linda Molyneux

Walking To School

I went to Downshall Infants and Primary up to the age of 12 when I then went to Ilford Country High in Gants Hill. I remember the daily walk along Meads Lane calling for a sour grapes gob stopper that would dye our mouths ...Read more

A memory of Seven Kings in 1963 by Linda Bell

Nights Out In Consett

I have some wonderful memories of nights out in Consett in the sixties. There was a pub called the Masons Arms run by Kevin and Ina Kearney and the barmaid Jenny, I think. It served the most beautiful beer in the world or so ...Read more

A memory of Consett in 1966 by Michael Smyth

My Childhood

My memories relates to 19yrs of living in Great Budworth, my father David Eaton grew up there to, as did my nanna! The memories I have of Great Budworth are as precious as the village, they never go away, I went to the village ...Read more

A memory of Great Budworth by Julie Newton (Eaton)

Pilgrims Hatch/Childhood.

I was born in London in 1937 and moved to Days Lane, Pilgrims Hatch in that year,so all my childhood years were spent around the Pilgrims Hatch area. Dad was always sharp of the mark and a couple of steps ahead so ...Read more

A memory of Brentwood in 1940 by Brian Taylor

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 nemeton2

Borough Green. The War Years.

I am 80 and lived with my parents in Borough Green from 1934 to the early fifties. We lived between Station Approach and the Cinema. Dad had his office attached. It is now Chinese . After being shops and Wally's café ...Read more

A memory of Borough Green by demayo

Fletchertown

Like many people who live in Cumbria I come from another part of the country. This is why I am particularly interested in the history of where I now live in Fletchertown. The Fletchertown Community Group is putting together an ...Read more

A memory of Fletchertown by Mick Jane

Schooldays And Beyond

Starting school for the first time was at Mistley Norman School, my first teacher was Miss Temple in the infants we were given a slate board and slate pencil one thing that sticks in my memory we all had a small mattres ...Read more

A memory of Manningtree in 1949 by Vernon Clarke

To School From Manor Road

Each day my journey either was via the cinder track (there was the old reservoir running alongside and the iron railway bridge stood in those days, the railway was still operating I think or in the stages of being ...Read more

A memory of Woodford Halse in 1966 by Linda Edwards

Captions

106 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.

Caption For London, Elephant And Castle 1885

The Elephant and Castle, a great meeting place of thoroughfares, was termed a 'ganglion of roads' by Dickens in 'Bleak House'.The squat old inn that gave it its name dominates the scene, and is

Caption For Dawlish, The Beach 1922

Jane Austen visited the town and mentioned it in one of her novels, while Charles Dickens chose it as the birthplace of his eponymous hero in 'Nicholas Nickleby'.

Caption For Lands End, 1890

Victorian travellers and writers, such as Dickens and Tennyson, all came to England's most westerly point and admired its rugged grandeur.

Caption For Dawlish, From Lea Mount 1896

Charles Dickens was fond of Dawlish, and used it as the birthplace of Nicholas Nickelby, thus developing the town's literary heritage.

Caption For Deepcar, From Greenmoor C1955

Stone from here was used to build Sheffield's Wicker Arches that carried the Manchester railway line from 1848 to 1969.

Caption For Shorne, The Post Office C1955

The typically Kentish peg-tiled roof, with its garnish of houseleek and lichen, would have been known to Charles Dickens, for whom a favourite walk was from his Gad's Hill home near Strood to Shorne

Caption For Ramsbottom, View Of Town C1955

Local businessmen William and Daniel Grant were the basis for the Cheeryble brothers in Charles Dickens' masterpiece 'Nicholas Nickleby'.

Caption For London, Old Curiosity Shop C1955

It has been claimed, probably erroneously, that it is the original of ‘the Old Curiosity Shop’ made immortal by Dickens as the home of ‘Little Nell’.

Caption For Broadstairs, The Harbour 1887

looking across Main Bay (now Viking Bay) towards the harbour, the pier and the prominent mansion Fort House (now called Bleak House), prior to its extension and castellation in 1901.This house was Dickens

Caption For Folkestone, The Leas 1901

Charles Dickens had earlier taken similar constitutional walks along this route while writing the opening chapters of 'Little Dorrit' in 1855.

Caption For Folkestone, The Leas 1901

Charles Dickens had earlier taken similar constitutional walks along this route while writing the opening chapters of 'Little Dorrit' in 1855.

Caption For Ipswich, Tavern Street 1896

Tavern Street is home to the Great White Horse, an inn stayed in by Charles Dickens, and described by him in 'The Pickwick Papers'.

Caption For Rochester, View From The Castle 1889

Charles Dickens knew the city well.

Caption For Malvern Wells, The Holywell 1904

Dickens, Carlyle, Gladstone and Florence Nightingale all came to Malvern to 'take the cure'.

Caption For Bury St Edmunds, Angel Hill C1955

The famous Angel Hotel, mentioned in Dickens' 'Pickwick Papers', is to the right. To the left are Abbey House, the Cathedral, the Norman tower and St Mary's.

Caption For Broadstairs, The Harbour 1887

The 'rare good sands', as Charles Dickens described them, still form the focal point of this 'old-fashioned watering place' where 'Nicholas Nickleby', 'David Copperfield', 'The Old Curiosity Shop', and

Caption For London, The Spaniards, Hampstead Heath C1890

Byron, Keats, Shelley and later Dickens all drank here.

Caption For Tewkesbury, Church Street 1907

The 18th-century Royal Hop Pole Hotel on the right- hand side of the street, with its wrought iron, flower- bedecked canopy and window boxes, is featured in Charles Dickens's 'Pickwick Papers

Caption For Shrewsbury, Unicorn Hotel 1891

In fact the interior was used as a set for Ebeneezer Scrooge's office during the recent filming of Dickens' 'A Christmas Carol'.

Caption For Folkestone, The Leas 1901

Charles Dickens had earlier taken similar constitutional walks along this route while writing the opening chapters of 'Little Dorrit' in 1855.

Caption For Rockingham, The Castle C1960

Charles Dickens stayed at Rockingham Castle, and wrote part of 'Bleak House' here.

Caption For London, The Strand C1900

Charles Dickens's parents married at the church in 1809.

Caption For Tong, The Village 1898

There is hardly anywhere in England that Charles Dickens did not visit and then use in a story.

Caption For Broadstairs, Promenade 1902

Modest little Broadstairs needs no defending, having powerful patrons, the most illustrious of whom was Charles Dickens, whose residence at 'Bleak House' is still pointed out as the chief monument of the