Places
6 places found.
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Photos
2,394 photos found. Showing results 821 to 840.
Maps
41 maps found.
Books
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Memories
2,822 memories found. Showing results 411 to 420.
Tilley Family In Uley
My great gran lived in Woodstock Cottage which was built by her husband. Her name was Emily Eliza Baker and she married a Albert John Tilley. They had 2 children, Edith Mary (my gran) and Daisy Helen. Edith married a Thomas ...Read more
A memory of Uley in 1860 by
My Early Years
my memories relate from the very early forties till the early eighties. I was born in Andover in 1937.My mother was a Lambourne and was born in Thruxton in 1903 at Rose cottage which is just to the left of the "George" looking ...Read more
A memory of Thruxton in 1940 by
Wrens Nest Bramhall Lane
I remember when I was about six, we lived in Peterborough and had travelled to Bramhall to visit my Grandparents Joe and Harriette Morris who lived at Wrens Nest #1 Bramhall Lane, There was a grassy area in front of the ...Read more
A memory of Bramhall in 1949 by
1939 1945
I have lovely memories of Wiveliscombe and my Father moved us there in September 1939. We lived in London and with the war upon us the move for me was very positive .I was just 3 at the time and really took to country life and we ...Read more
A memory of Wiveliscombe in 1940 by
Visits To Wareside 1964 Present
My dad was born at Hillside Cottages in Wareside in 1929 (I think). I remember visiting my Grandmother there up until she moved to Ware round about 1978/9. She lived in the house with the "Hillside Cottages" sign on ...Read more
A memory of Wareside in 1975 by
Early Life In Chalford
I was born in Chalford at "The Little House" in Chalford Hill in 1932 and lived there until March 1940. I was the youngest of six children who all lived in the cottage and have very lovely memories of both the cottage ...Read more
A memory of Chalford Hill in 1930 by
Cragg Farm
This photo shows Cragg Farm painted white and Sweetbriar Cottage attached. My mother was Margaret Jane Carr and was born and raised at Cragg Farm. She was 16 years old in 1926 when this photo was taken. She married Roland Calverley ...Read more
A memory of Starbotton by
Boyhood Memories Of Peperharrow Road.
It was the summer of 1946 and we used to go swimming in the river at a spot called "The Ginny" which was up the road a little (towards the camera) on the opposite side of the road to these houses. This part ...Read more
A memory of Godalming in 1946 by
My Great Grandfather
The man in this photograph is quite possibly my Great-Grandfather. The family name is 'Wye' and he was the lock keeper at St. Catherines lock during the late 1800's early 1900's the family lived in the lock keepers cottage on ...Read more
A memory of Guildford in 1900 by
Tied Cottage
my dad John Hollis was born in tied cottage at whatcombe march 29th 1930, his dad Frederick Hollis trained race horses at the stables at whatcombe for Dick Dawson, a beautiful part of the country, anyone know anything about whatcombe around that time,
A memory of Whatcombe in 1930 by
Captions
2,020 captions found. Showing results 985 to 1,008.
When the Cotton family commissioned Capability Brown to design a park in 1756, he cut a swathe through the village, separating the church and a couple of farms and cottages from the rest of the village
The Cottage Hospital, now converted into private residences, is the last building on the left-hand side of this view, with, possibly, a motor ambulance pulling out of the drive.
The lock keeper's cottage (left of photograph) is now a private house, and the large building behind has gone.
A pony and trap stand on the main road which passes by the foot of the green on the left, around which are the tile-hung yeomens' cottages and the village pub.
Until 1964, Mill Lane was a picturesque street of brick and half-timbered cottages, some of them medieval.
The cramped grey stone cottages and shops seem in danger of toppling over each other.
The lock has since been reconstructed and the lock-keeper's cottage was rebuilt in 1919.
This view looks from the lock-keeper's cottage garden eastwards into the lock. The chestnut palings are now a smart well-trimmed beech hedge.
On a nearby hill is an old cottage, once the abode of the notorious highwayman Jack Diamond, who is said still to haunt the area in ghostly form.
However, both the cottage and the 15th- century church tower have lost most of their ivy.
Colehill comprised only a few scattered cottages until Victorian times, when the first of its population growth spurts led to a demand for church services.
The tall block beyond has an industrial appearance, but in fact it consists of five cottages.
Recent road schemes have meant that the mill-workers' cottages on the right have been demolished to make way for a new roundabout, with a modern block of flats instead.
In this area there are a concentration of attractive small plaques above the doors and lintels announcing that the cottages are owned by Blakeney Neighbourhood Housing Association.
The cottages where the children are gathered disappeared in the last half of the 20th century, and so did the bell on the Victorian chapel.
The thatched cottage next door was once the home of the local carpenter, William Gray. He made coffins, amongst other things, and had his own standing ready in the kitchen.
This charming lane near the church has a concentration of thatched cottages. Further along is Jubilee Barn, the original tithe barn of the village.
Many of its cottages were built in the 17th century, and the Royal Oak is older, claiming a date of about 1502. A famous treat, which is still sold today, was Granny's Nettle Beer.
The charming cottages on the left have either been demolished or modernised out of recognition.
This thatched cottage stands between Bouncers Lane and Blacksmith's Lane, and is one of many half-timbered buildings in the village.
Old rough-stone cottages line the street which leads up to the market place. Just visible is Garstang's market cross, a Tuscan column topped by a stone orb that was erected in 1754.
That ubiquitous cottage industry of Wales has passed now, but farmers still tend their flocks. Nowadays they would be transported by lorry to their destinations.
Next to the towpath is a traditional riverside cottage with a brick parapet gable.
The more urban style of the three-storey shop contrasts with the cottagey Berkeley Cottage in the foreground.
Places (6)
Photos (2394)
Memories (2822)
Books (0)
Maps (41)