Places
17 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Bridge End, Oxfordshire
- Bridge End, Lincolnshire
- Bridge End, Essex
- Bridge End, Bedfordshire
- Bridge End, Clwyd
- Bridge End, Warwickshire
- Bridge End, Surrey
- Bridge End, Durham (near Frosterley)
- Bridge End, Northumberland (near Hexham)
- Bridge End, Hereford & Worcester (near Tirley)
- Bridge End, Hereford & Worcester (near Bosbury)
- Bridge End, Shetland Islands
- Bridge End, Cumbria (near Carlisle)
- Bridge End, Northumberland (near Hexham)
- Bridge End, Devon (near Kingsbridge)
- Bridge End, Devon (near Sidmouth)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Pateley Bridge)
Photos
40 photos found. Showing results 721 to 40.
Maps
524 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 865 to 2.
Memories
1,926 memories found. Showing results 361 to 370.
The Seats At Lynemouth
When we were teenagers and bored we would sit on old men's seat at the junction over the bridge and watch the smelly tankies go by. Some of the lads would go tanky hopping and grab on the back for a ride! The girls would ...Read more
A memory of Newbiggin by
Growing Up In Pembridge
I was born in 1960 at Glanarrow Cottages, Bridge St. All my early memories are of a happy childhood. I can remember the deep snow of 1963, when I opened the back door it seemed that the snow was halfway up it!!! I can ...Read more
A memory of Pembridge by
The Lynemouth Inn
We used to call it the hotel, it was the hub of the village, there was a bottle and jug at the side door and me dad would send me down to get a bottle of double maxim and let me have a little taste when I was just a bairn. We ...Read more
A memory of Lynemouth in 1967 by
Coleton Fishacre Near Kingswear
Just a five minute drive along Mt Ridley Road to the east of Kingswear will lead you to a glorious National Trust house and garden called Coleton Fishacre. I have two memories of my visit - the wonderful ...Read more
A memory of Kingswear in 2012 by
Happy Days At Port Ann
I lived in Port Ann for 16 years. I have a lot of memories of Port Ann, I would go to the blue rocks and go swimming - be there all day and sit under the bridge and hide when you get called in for your bed, or even ...Read more
A memory of Port Ann
Hanging Over
I remember being hung over this bridge by my ankles. Not one of my better moments and I'm sure if the two lads that did it read this, they will know who they are without me having to mention their names! We had some happy times together, our gang.Those were the days.
A memory of Great Haywood in 1966 by
My Years At Woodford Bridge
I lived in Canfield Road, Woodford the very last house on the left hand side, right next to the cricket field. I went to the little mission (The Bridge) run alongside the tie factory. I remember Grants the shoe ...Read more
A memory of Woodford Green in 1957 by
Catholic Seminary
I'm researching my family and have come across a reference to a Catholic seminary for foreign missionaries in Newby Bridge. The person I'm tracing would have been there in the late 1920s. If anyone has knowledge of this place, I would greatly appreciate hearing about it. Thank you.
A memory of Newby Bridge in 1920
Plympton Station Holiday Memories
My grandparents, my mother's parents, lived in Vicarage Road, Plympton until 1962 when they moved to Moorland Avenue. As children we always spent our holidays with them and I have early memories of accompanying ...Read more
A memory of Plympton in 1958 by
Blackmill
I lived in Glyn-Llan (Penny McKay) 1 of 6 girls. I loved spending my summer days down the Dimbath, building dams so we could swim and build forts. We would take a picnic and off we'd go all day and our parents never worried about us ...Read more
A memory of Blackmill by
Captions
1,770 captions found. Showing results 865 to 888.
Before the creation of Ladies Island, as a result of straightening the River Stour in the 1950s, Ladies Bridge carried the footpath from Cornard Road over the river.
A bronze tablet removed from an earlier bridge reads: 'Pray for Humfrey Pakynton Esquyer borne in Stanford which payde for ye workemanshepe and makyng of this brygg the whiche was rered & made the first
On the right, a coaster can be seen berthed at R & W Paul's granary.
Field Marshal Conway's great 18th-century landscape improve- ments and garden buildings in the grounds of Park Place included the rustic boulder-bedecked bridge on the right, carrying the Wargrave
The Bear and Billet public house in Lower Bridge Street was built in 1664; until 1867 it was the town house of the earls of Shrewsbury.
Until the 1950s Middle Mill Weir occupied the centre of this view, but the bridge over the weir remains as an important pedestrian link to the sportsfields and parks on the north bank of the River.
one of those places where pedestrians took their lives in their hands, having to dodge scores of ICI workers as they freewheeled four, five, even six abreast down Winnington Hill, through the Bull Ring and
Also, there is no ramp yet up to the bridge crossing the railway line and leading to Clare House Lane – it was built in 1904.
In days gone by, steamers from the resorts of Swanage, Weymouth and Bournemouth would call in at Lulworth Cove, landing passengers either by a plank bridge - as seen here - or by rowing boat, depending
Originally called the House of Lords, this public house was enlarged by the Bridge Company when the ferry closed. It was renamed the Clayhithe Ferry in the 1880s, and by 1916 had become a hotel.
Sumptuous Victorian houseboats line the River Thames on 'Boat House Reach', close to the bridge.
Note the old footbridge and causeway to the left of the picture, now replaced by a bridge.
Three pairs of stones were driven by a water wheel, and produced 100 sacks of flour a week in 1869. The bridge over the Avon was built in 1893.
The bridge has a total length of 1,352ft, while the distance between the piers is 702ft.
In the 1960s the water gardens with their smartly trimmed lawns and rustic bridges were enjoyed by all ages.
This is the three-arched red brick medieval bridge over the River Brett at Hadleigh.
This photograph shows W H Smith & Son on the left of the picture, a few yards from the road bridge crossing the River Pang in the centre of the village.
Turning to face downstream, the Trent's washlands are seen from High Bridge.
Designed and constructed as a working tool, canals have become some of the most attractive and restful waterways in Britain.
There seems to be ample room beneath the wide arches of Llanfoist Bridge, but when the Usk floods the waters have often risen to the top of them and flooded the Castle Meadows in the foreground
A rustic bridge spans an ornamental lake in this picturesque park.
There was always a flurry of excitement and activity at the Bridge Restaurant and Tea Gardens on Nags Head Island when the pleasure boats arrived, especially during the summer.
This building is the last remnant of the Tannery, and still stands east of the bridge opposite Greenaway's car park.
What appears to be a statue projecting above the Wilton Bridge is, in fact, a sundial. The clock looks in four different directions and there are metal gnomons on each face.
Places (17)
Photos (40)
Memories (1926)
Books (2)
Maps (524)