Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Devil's Bridge, Dyfed
- Menai Bridge, Gwynedd
- Hebden Bridge, Yorkshire
- Pateley Bridge, Yorkshire
- Sowerby Bridge, Yorkshire
- Bamber Bridge, Lancashire
- Bridge of Allan, Central Scotland
- Victoria Bridge, County Tyrone
- Two Mile Bridge, Republic of Ireland
- Greta Bridge, Durham
- Three Bridges, Sussex
- Newby Bridge, Cumbria
- Bridge, Kent
- Marple Bridge, Greater Manchester
- Wootton Bridge, Isle of Wight
- Woodford Bridge, Greater London
- Dunsop Bridge, Lancashire
- Forth Bridge, Lothian
- Haydon Bridge, Northumberland
- Shotley Bridge, Durham
- Wisemans Bridge, Dyfed
- Two Bridges, Devon
- Stanford Bridge, Hereford & Worcester
- Mylor Bridge, Cornwall
- Calder Bridge, Cumbria
- Whaley Bridge, Derbyshire
- Kerne Bridge, Hereford & Worcester
- Stamford Bridge, Yorkshire
- Drift Bridge, Surrey
- Cowan Bridge, Lancashire
- Acton Bridge, Cheshire
- Stow Bridge, Norfolk
- Penny Bridge, Cumbria
- Four Mile Bridge, Gwynedd
- Eamont Bridge, Cumbria
- Sutton Bridge, Lincolnshire
Photos
10,057 photos found. Showing results 741 to 760.
Maps
1,153 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
2,061 memories found. Showing results 371 to 380.
Lady Margaret Road
We moved to 108 Lady Margaret Road in 1969. I went to St. Anselms RC school in the Green and then later Southall Grammar (Villiers); my brothers William and Martin went to St. Marks (Hounslow) and Ealing Green then to Dormers. ...Read more
A memory of Heston in 1970 by
Photos Of The House I Grew Up In On Crown Road
My brother Don Quarterman sent me to this web site. What an amazing collection of photographs! So I have to talk about two that show the house we grew up in, Mulberry Cottage. The earlier one ...Read more
A memory of Wheatley in 1953 by
Eton Side Bridge House Hotel 1937
I believe this is still in operation as a hotel, to the left are the boathouses where the Eton rowing club was housed.
A memory of Windsor by
Pontypool Town Centre
I lived in Upper Bridge Street and remember a few of the shops in town, I think! On the corner of Upper Bridge Street and the Bell Pitch was Franketti's fish shop with an awesome Art Nouveau till and free chips if you took ...Read more
A memory of Pontypool in 1960 by
Cofton Farm Camp Site
'Eee, when I were a lad'....... in the 1950's my dad and I would get the bus from Exeter to Dawlish and camp for a week at Cofton Farm, using a little WWII army-surplus 2-man ridge tent. My elder brother was in The Scouts, ...Read more
A memory of Starcross by
Growing Up With The Dinosaurs.
I lived in Thicket Grove which had the Thicket public house at the top. Crystal Palace Park was a very short walk away. During the school holidays we would spend our days in the park. Mum would pack us a picnic ...Read more
A memory of Crystal Palace in 1953 by
My Childhood Of Old Bracknell Farm
Hi Peter, I remember the Thompkins was it the baker or was that the Cheneys? Joe Smith was the newsagent who used to treat the kids to a summer outing by train every summer. We used to get a new florin and a ...Read more
A memory of Bracknell in 1949 by
Town Hall Roundabout
Living in Watford from the early 1950's, I well remember the Town Hall roundabout before they moved it. Can't recollect whether it was nearer or further away. I can recollect, not far from a pub called the OBH, or almost ...Read more
A memory of Watford in 1952 by
Evacuation To Fonab Castle Sept.1939
Evacuation - September 3rd 1939 The government decided that mothers and children should be moved to the countryside away from areas at risk from bombing. On the 3rd, parents and children all gathered at their ...Read more
A memory of Pitlochry in 1930 by
Rowfant Station
When we lived at the Fox Hotel (opposite Three Bridges Station), Mrs Turner, who was the retired station mistress (and still lived in the station house), used to catch the evening train to us, spend a couple of hours in the ...Read more
A memory of Rowfant by
Captions
2,231 captions found. Showing results 889 to 912.
The bridge has a total length of 1,352ft, while the distance between the piers is 702ft.
Here, it passes beneath an old packhorse bridge beside what is now a caravan site at Burrowhayes Farm.
In the 1960s the water gardens with their smartly trimmed lawns and rustic bridges were enjoyed by all ages.
Here we see the junction of the Hathersage road and the road leading down to the bridge over the Derwent.
This is the three-arched red brick medieval bridge over the River Brett at Hadleigh.
The medieval bridge over the River Ouse was started in 1332 to connect Huntingdon with Godmanchester, and the respective authorities paid for three arches - note the different styles - with the builders
Over the Town Bridge, which forms the old county boundary, the power station has been replaced with a shopping centre.
This view shows Bridge Street on the north bank of the Kennet and Avon canal.
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.
The bridge in the foreground of this photograph leads over the River Leven to a car park designated for the use of patrons of Suggitts ice cream parlour, something of an institution in
The stream and its bridge are a favourite 'Pooh Sticks' venue for the many children who play here.
The bridge was designed by Thomas Telford and erected in 1828.
Prior to the building of the Severn Bridge, which now sweeps above the peninsula of Beachley Point, this little powered ferry carried small vehicles across the Severn to the outskirts of
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
J Loynes and Sons started the boom with their boatyard near the bridge.
The now much enlarged thatched house on the right is the only Bridge Inn building standing today; the left-hand one has been demolished.
We cross the railway bridge, and look back from where we have come from. On the right is Mr Turner's grocery shop, with the Standard public house in the distance.
The world-famous regatta takes place on a scenic stretch of the Thames between Henley Bridge and Temple Island, site of an elegant Georgian folly.
Horses pulling the narrowboats would have climbed up the bridge on the right and down on the left, thus changing from one side of the canal to the other at this point.
This elegant little suspension or 'swing bridge' over the River Derwent is a pleasing feature of the Plain of York village of Huttons Ambo, near Malton.
This is the new diesel vessel which had just replaced steam; it has now been superseded by a larger 'floating bridge'.
The path extends south right to the recreation park, and to the north, by crossing the bridge to the right hand bank, into the area known as Scot's Garden at the foot of Castle Hill.
This view of the bridge was taken from the west bank, nearest Bakewell. Towards the far bank, the river is full of mallards, all demanding a sandwich with menaces.
The River Can, as seen from the rustic bridge, pursues a winding course.
Places (284)
Photos (10057)
Memories (2061)
Books (0)
Maps (1153)