Places
14 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Coates, Lancashire
- Coate, Wiltshire (near Swindon)
- Coates, Lincolnshire
- Coat, Somerset
- Coates, Gloucestershire
- Coates, Nottinghamshire
- Coates, Cambridgeshire
- Coates, Sussex
- Coates, Lothian (near Penicuik)
- Coate, Wiltshire (near Devizes)
- Great Coates, Humberside
- Salt Coates, Cumbria
- Little Coates, Humberside
- North Coates Airfield, Lincolnshire
Photos
49 photos found. Showing results 921 to 49.
Maps
88 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 1,105 to 1.
Memories
1,483 memories found. Showing results 461 to 470.
Acton Bridge
Hello Laurie My dad had the boat 'Jan' - I still see Roger & Jean from time to time. We still have a boat on the Weaver at AB, and she is called 'Triton'. I have a brother called Peter and my parents were called Peter ...Read more
A memory of Acton Bridge in 1960
Mevagissey Museum
I have many childhood memories of Mevagissey. My parents bought a cottage in Cliff Street, Mevagissey during the late 1950s. We used it as a holiday home until 1965 when my father retired from designing Colt Houses (all timber ...Read more
A memory of Mevagissey in 1969 by
A Year Away From The Colonies
I lived in Ilford in 1963. My father had won a scholarship to study chest disease in London, so he and Mom packed us up and carted us off to England. Ilford offered the cheapest acceptable lodgings close to London for ...Read more
A memory of Ilford in 1963 by
Brought Up In Tongue End
I, like my brothers, sisters and father went to the primary school in Tongue End, at the time I started Mrs Vantol was Headmistess but was later replaced by Mr and Mrs Gore, the school had around 30 children. Meals were ...Read more
A memory of Tongue End by
Boat House
These are the years when the boat house was flooded, 1771 1832, 1850. They are still marked outside of the boat house. And in 1798 George Stephenson worked at the Water Row colliery.
A memory of Newburn by
Childhood Memories
Being born in a house opposite the Angel pub in 1952, and having a family history going back over 300 hundred years in the village, I think we were a local family. Those memories of the school holiday times will last a ...Read more
A memory of Stanton by
Penton Park Caravan Ppark
My memory of Laleham is of when my father would come and collect us for weekend visits, he would come and collect us on a Saturday, and take me and my brother to the caravan park where he lived at the time, now known as ...Read more
A memory of Laleham in 1960 by
Down Memory Lane
I was born in Nottingham and came to live in Gateshead when I was 4 years old. My mother was in the W.R.A.C and met my father when she was stationed down there. He was a Waiter in the Crown Hotel in Bawtry and was originally ...Read more
A memory of Gateshead by
Campsite
As a family we used to go camping at Laleham every weekend, spring to autumn. This was from about 1950 until the mid 1960s. It was an amazing time, like most childhood memories. My nan and grandad were the Greenland family and they had ...Read more
A memory of Laleham in 1955 by
Marton Boarding School
I was at Marton Boarding School (if memory serves me well) from 1966 to 1968. What a place, when I arrived I was petrified, the oddball kid from Africa. I remember Taylor telling me to go back to Africa and play with my ...Read more
A memory of Whitegate in 1966 by
Captions
1,648 captions found. Showing results 1,105 to 1,128.
Children are playing at the water's edge and on Ferry Dock; boats rest in the channel; a yacht is being painted; and people relax in the ornate shelter.
Boat owners can still moor up and hop ashore for a pint at the Jolly Sailor.
The 65-acre Meare (the correct spelling at fantasy Thorpeness) was dug out of marshland to provide a boating lake for children.
The river could be crossed by a rowing boat ferry, which replaced a Victorian steam ferry, after the Second World War.
The Mersey's plucky little boats saw action in both World Wars, and the original 'Iris' and 'Daffodil' were awarded their title 'Royal' for their gallant service at Zeebrugge in 1918.
A conglomeration of craft are passing through the lock on a warm summer's day, with not a motor boat in sight.
Dartmouth regatta is still held in August; but rarely can the river have been as busy or the boats as decorated as here in late Victorian times, when attendance at the regatta was highly chic and drew
Then there were the much smaller double-ended open boats known as fifie yawls, which were employed for haddock lining in winter and spring.
The Beach House soon became a refreshment rooms, and even had swing boats erected beside it.
A boatyard adjoined the bridge from Victorian times until the 1970s, and leisure boating has since been revived through the Dreamboats millennium project.
Here a little Victorian girl poses among the rowing boats laid up on the beach.
The sign on the large warehouse advertises a daily cargo boat to and from the mainland.
This small harbour shelters visiting boats, as well as having its own share of resident owners.
Even when they were not fishing, fishermen always had work to do, repairing nets and maintaining the boats.
Beyond the boats is the north bank of the river, and behind the trees is the large Russell Park, laid out in the late 1880s.
Double-ended clinker-built boats with twin lugsails, they were capable of sailing at speed, an essential prerequisite for the job.
The variety of boats and number of boatsheds indicate the importance of Wroxham as a centre for holidaymakers.
Even when they were not fishing, fishermen always had work to do, repairing nets and maintaining the boats.
The Suffolk boat builder took out 56 patents on the design and the first experimental hover- craft crossed the English Channel in
This is another small bay with good shelter and fine sands - here only two boats were built.
In fact, a navigable creek once brought boats right up to where we are standing (near the entrance to the playing fields).
Steam boats at the boarding point by the Pier give some idea of the popularity of these vessels during the summer months.
The attention of the lady in the fore ground is riveted by the crew in the fishing boats as they adjust their sails in preparation for leaving harbour.
The wall beyond the boating pool is part of the north defensive wall of the Roman town.
Places (14)
Photos (49)
Memories (1483)
Books (1)
Maps (88)