Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- West End, Gwynedd
- West End, Hampshire (near Southampton)
- West End, Surrey (near Camberley)
- West End, Hampshire (near Medstead)
- West End, Leicestershire
- Ward End, West Midlands
- Shard End, West Midlands
- West End, Gloucestershire
- West End, Dorset
- West End, Hertfordshire
- West End, Suffolk
- West End, Sussex
- West End, Strathclyde
- West End, Gwent
- West End, Lancashire (near Morecambe)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Tadcaster)
- West End, Avon (near Nailsea)
- West End, Somerset (near Wells)
- West End, Oxfordshire (near Wallingford)
- West End, Berkshire (near Wokingham)
- West End, Norfolk (near Great Yarmouth)
- West End, Bedfordshire (near Great Staughton)
- West End, Kent (near Sittingbourne)
- West End, Yorkshire (near South Cave)
- West End, Avon (near Yate)
- West End, Wiltshire (near Shaftesbury)
- West End, Wiltshire (near Bowerchalke)
- West End, Berkshire (near Bracknell)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Driffield)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Hedon)
- West End, Lincolnshire (near Boston)
- West End, Cumbria (near Carlisle)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Cleckheaton)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Horsforth)
- West End, Oxfordshire (near Hardwick)
- West End, Bedfordshire (near Kempston)
Photos
279 photos found. Showing results 861 to 279.
Maps
1,651 maps found.
Books
19 books found. Showing results 1,033 to 19.
Memories
2,049 memories found. Showing results 431 to 440.
Radlett Prep
I attended Radlett Prep between 1958 and 1965. It was located in a converted three floored Edwardian house on the corner of Hillside Avenue and Aldenham Grove, and has since been converted back to a private residence. Aldenham Grove ...Read more
A memory of Radlett by
Living On The Coastguard Station
The year England won the World Cup (1966) I was 8 years old and living on the coastguard station at Newhaven with my younger brother, you could hear my late father yell as England lifted the World Cup, we beat ...Read more
A memory of Newhaven in 1966
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
An Addition To My Thornhill Memory
I've remembered those names. Bob's name was Corrie; Wilf was Wilf Myers, they were two of three Overmen (Deputies) at Haile Moor. The third was big Alf Varah. A gentleman called Chris Gibson sent me a ...Read more
A memory of Thornhill in 1961 by
Grandparents And Father
Grandparents lived in Farrington Gurney and my father was born there in 1922. Grandfather was Rees West-Gaul, father Geoffrey West-Gaul, does anyone know the family?
A memory of Farrington Gurney in 1920 by
The Nursery
I was born in 4 The Nursery in 1944. My gran Elizabeth Bayles, my mother Emma Bayles. I went to Millbank School at age 4yrs. I can remember my first teacher there Miss Watkins. My Mother worked at Lockeys buses as a bus ...Read more
A memory of West Auckland in 1953 by
Childhood To Marriage
MY first memory of"LLan"was driving down the hill from Swffryyd, to my new home at No.6 High Street. My father Thomas Hughes, with my mother Eileen, had purchased Barttlets Grocery Store,a long held wish of my fathers to ...Read more
A memory of Llanhilleth by
Tinker Tailor Solder Sailor 1916
Lynette Carter nee Evans My grandfather was Romany Gypsy, Stephen Evans, who better known as (Stinny)? During 1916 he lived in Gorseion, while his wife; my grandmother Mary Ellen Boswell lived in Gowerton. ...Read more
A memory of Gorseinon in 1900 by
Roots
Lived in Eltham from 1940, when Dad was in Artillery, and off to France, came back injured from Dunkirk, but alive, just ! Homes were, Rancliffe Gdns, Milburn Gdns, and Meadowside. Lovely road with unrestricted views across what is now ...Read more
A memory of Mottingham in 1940 by
Northern Drive Collyhurst
Hi everyone, my family lived in Northern Drive from 1955 - 1966. I lived with my granparents, Jake Winter and Flo his wife. I remember the [flats] street parties we had at Whit Week. My uncle Norman used to play the ...Read more
A memory of Collyhurst in 1955 by
Captions
1,994 captions found. Showing results 1,033 to 1,056.
Little Sutton lies just north-west of Ellesmere Port, and in recent years, along with Great Sutton, it has more or less coalesced with it.
The monument stands in the centre of an area known as the Sanctuary by the west door of the abbey and on the site of the abbey gateway.
Immediately north-east of the Hall is St Peter's Church, almost entirely rebuilt in the 1770s by Thomas Lumby in partly scholarly Gothic, although a cheery Strawberry Hill Gothick breaks out here and
We are south-west of the village centre, and the photograph exudes a strange feeling of well- cared-for neglect.
Avonmouth was used by the Imperial Direct West India Mail Service Co, whose ships sported white hulls and yellow funnels.
In 1965 the birds still sang in the Town Hall gardens, and although relatively noisy, it was an extremely pleasant place to sit and mull over the fortunes of the day.
York was a military centre, and over 1,000 men were stationed here when the barracks were built.
The chapel is on the left with the school quadrangle and associated buildings in the middle distance.
All Saints' Church is an interesting one, with Anglo-Saxon 'long and short work' quoins to the nave and an Anglo-Saxon tower with an elaborate Norman west doorway and arcading.
Victorian concert party enclosures progressed to concrete shelters and rooftop walkways in the 1950s.
We are now standing in a position to the east of the Cross and are looking towards West Street, with Church Hill on the immediate right of the pantiled lean-to building and the Star Inn
Further along the High Street, we see the Black Bull (left) with the White Lion in the distance.
In the 1960s two large housing estates were laid out on the east and west of the main street, and in 1972 a Village Society was formed to oppose the continued growth.
There could not be anywhere more northern-sounding than Mytholmroyd, the woollen village crammed into the bottom of the Calder Valley west of Halifax.
Built in 1870, this was one of the many West Yorkshire institutes to offer working craftsmen the opportunity to study new skills and learn more about the world.
This view on the Stainby Road, with the houses on the left fronting onto the High Street, which runs left from the signpost, hardly does justice to this large and attractive village in whose part-Norman
Wares from the small shop on the right spill out onto the pavement, and among other commodities it advertises petrol!
Dobson restored the chancel and nave and added a north aisle and the west tower.
A view taken from the west entrance, looking straight down the nave to the east window.
In 1886 Mevagissey landed 255,000 hundredweight of fish, the greatest quantity of any port in the west.
Windmill Hill leads up from the site of the old West Gate, demolished at the start of the 19th century but remembered in the pub of the same name.
The Gardens have two more claims to fame: they became the home of Glamorgan County Cricket Club, and much earlier, in September 1891, they had staged Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show.
Budleigh Salterton stands to the west of the silted estuary of the River Otter.
Beyond Hounslow, the Great West Road divided into the two coaching routes leading to Bath and Exeter.
Places (99)
Photos (279)
Memories (2049)
Books (19)
Maps (1651)