Places
1 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
11 photos found. Showing results 681 to 11.
Maps
4 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 817 to 1.
Memories
1,362 memories found. Showing results 341 to 350.
Walcott Caravan Site
The old showman's type caravan at the back of the field was owned by a Mr Palmer and was still on the site in 1970 when we left (the site was being sold). Mr Palmer had a small dinghy in which he used to go fishing out to sea, ...Read more
A memory of Walcott in 1967 by
Garfield Road Rec
Half way down Garfield Road was the Recreation Ground; better know to all as simply the Rec. It was quiet a large area bounded on one side by Garfield Road and the other by the River Wandle, about which more another ...Read more
A memory of Wimbledon in 1954 by
Selling Ice Creams On Beach
I remember fondly working during school holidays selling ice creams on Bournemouth beach. I worked for the Corporation and had to wear full length white overalls and push a large yellow barrow filled with ice ...Read more
A memory of Bournemouth in 1959 by
Summer Holidays In Westgate On Sea
I wonder if anyone is old enough to remember Westgate on Sea before the war! Our family would go there every year for 2 weeks and stay at a guest house not far from where the railway crosses the road ...Read more
A memory of Westgate on Sea in 1930
Laleham Abbey School
I was a pupil for two years at Laleham Abbey. My maiden name being, Elsa-Marie Burberry - Elsa. I was friends with Phyllis Baker who I remember as having beautiful auburn-red hair and who I think came from Totteridge. Other ...Read more
A memory of Laleham in 1956 by
Us Air Force Family Living In Knodishall 1968 1971
We lived in Knodishall from 1968 to 1971. My dad was stationed at Bentwaters and we lived at 123 Judith Avenue in Knodishall. We lived next door to Brian and Connie Moore, and they had a ...Read more
A memory of Knodishall in 1968 by
All The Fun Of The Fair
Who remembers the travelling fun fair that came to Blackfield in the 1960s? Did you go to Blackfield Junior school? What about skating on the frozen Gravel pits at Holbury in the winter 1962/3/4 or the Esso Cinema? or the ...Read more
A memory of Holbury in 1960 by
Evacuated Fro Newcastle To Camp In1940
Mr Scott was Head Master. Very much run on Military lines, but have good memoriies of that time. I was in Beeches house, my younger brother was there too. Anyone from that era out there and want to share the good old days with Chilton?
A memory of Hexham in 1940
Born And Bred In Langley From 1943 To 1967
Norn at no 36 Main Road, mother Marion Simpson married to Frank Williams, schooled at Langley Primary School, Beech Hall Prep School and Macclesfield Grammar, worked at the blood transfusion ...Read more
A memory of Langley by
Lower Hyde Farm 66
I too stayed at Lower Hyde Farm on many occasions as a child and remember arriving on the day of the 19966 World Cup final. We listened to the match on another passenger's transistor radio, standing in the guards's van on the ...Read more
A memory of Shanklin in 1966 by
Captions
1,130 captions found. Showing results 817 to 840.
Another delightful view of the Cat Nab area of Saltburn, with the distinctive profile of Huntcliffe beyond.
Amroth is a former coal mining village at the southerly end of the 186 mile-long Pembrokeshire Coast Path.
The Frith archive contains a number of these posed group pictures; the majority seem to have been taken during the 1890s.
A family walk down Magazine Lane Slipway onto the beach. This is close to the site of the magazines: ships entering the Mersey had to deposit any gunpowder there during their stay in port.
This bustling scene looks east to the pier pavilion and the pier. The bucket and spades, bare feet, donkeys and wickerwork basket chairs recapture a vanished era.
Anstey's Cove, with Redgate Beach hidden on the left, was a favourite bathing spot for Agatha Christie, who was born in Torquay in 1890.
Traditionally in the ownership of wealthy occupants, the private steps leading down to the beach still belong to these houses, except those on the extreme left.
The largest seaside town in West Sussex, Worthing began to grow as a fashionable resort towards the end of the 18th century.
A hugely expansive beach here means that it never fills up with holidaymakers in this popular resort and former fishing and trading port.
Posed on Goscar Rock on Tenby's North Beach, these women were paid for their work as models.
Skegness's most famous fairground ride was the Figure Eight, which was regarded as a worthy rival to Coney Island!
The sands, which are extensive enough to give the full benefit of ozone to those who avail themselves of its health-giving properties, form an excellent bathing-ground, entirely free from danger.
By the 1960s, more and more holiday visitors were arriving by car as well as by rail.
Hunstanton is unique for north Norfolk resort towns in that it looks west across the sea and not east.
Oh, we do like to be beside the seaside! These sunseekers are thoroughly enjoying a paddle in the Channel.
This is a fine view of the 'lost beach' of Gorleston, so named because after years of erosion it has been reduced to a fraction of the size we see here.
At the beginning of the last millennium, marauding Danes landed on these sandy Devon beaches and put the village of Exmouth to fire and sword.
Once a sleepy Devon backwater, Croyde's beach and bay was discovered by holidaymakers in the 19th century. With two huge caravan parks, this area fills up dramatically in the short summer season.
The unmade road leads from the village to the beach. The sand-dunes are covered with marram grass, which helps knit them together and prevent erosion on this windy coast.
From the beginning of the 19th century most resorts had bathing machines in which bathers could change while being dragged into the sea, initially by horses and later by winches.
Blue Anchor is a hamlet in Carhampton parish, and it takes its name from the local inn. In 1874 it became a halt on the Taunton to Minehead railway line, now the privately run West Somerset Railway.
The old 'birdcage' bandstand was replaced in 1934-35 by an altogether grander affair with a seating capacity of three thousand people.
Heacham has the distinctive flat beach of this part of the West Norfolk coast.
The bathing machines are doing good business. In the 1720s, it was the custom for those 'taking the waters' to bathe in the sea.
Places (1)
Photos (11)
Memories (1362)
Books (1)
Maps (4)