Places
25 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- East Wall, Republic of Ireland
- Pell Wall, Shropshire
- Wall, Northumberland
- Heddon-on-the-Wall, Northumberland
- Wall, Cornwall
- Walls, Shetland Islands
- Wall, Staffordshire
- East Wall, Shropshire
- Wall End, Kent
- Hobbs Wall, Avon
- Wall Bank, Shropshire
- Wall Nook, Durham
- Knowl Wall, Staffordshire
- Hazelton Walls, Fife
- Wall Mead, Avon
- Mid Walls, Shetland Islands
- Greetland Wall Nook, Yorkshire
- Aston le Walls, Northamptonshire
- Wall Heath, West Midlands
- Wall Hill, Greater Manchester
- Wall under Heywood, Shropshire
- Wall End, Cumbria (near Millom)
- Dale of Walls, Shetland Islands
- Bridge of Walls, Shetland Islands
- Hole-in-the Wall, Hereford & Worcester
Photos
515 photos found. Showing results 921 to 515.
Maps
172 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,986 memories found. Showing results 461 to 470.
W & C French Contractors
This is a Memory Without Evidence. In 1984 I visited my childhood home, "Ivy Cottage" no 58 Epping New Road, Buckhurst Hill, Essex. The cottage, in poor condition, was still being lived in. The contractors yard was ...Read more
A memory of Buckhurst Hill in 1984 by
Wallsend 1954 68
Born in the Green Maternity Hosp 1954, lived in Windsor Drive, Howden, Sandown Gardens, Howden and Prospect Ave. I remember being taken to the Masons Arms at Bigges Main in a pushchair, parked outside the corrugated iron lean to ...Read more
A memory of Wallsend by
Happy Memories
I worked in the Hotel Continental in the very hot summer of 1976 with 3 friends. It was a glorious summer season and the sun shone endlessly, so we spent many lazy days (between work shifts!) on the beach. We danced into the early ...Read more
A memory of Mundesley in 1976 by
Of Beaches, Giant Snow Balls, Sniggery Woods And Little Crosby
I spent my infant years in Crossender Rd. In the winter we had hills nearby adjacent to the Southport to L'pool line. We used to roll little snow balls until they achieved a massive girth ...Read more
A memory of Crosby in 1955
Memories Of Hulme
My name is Lynda (Howarth) and I lived in Hulme from 1943 until 1953. My Mum was Edith Woods, and she married Stanley Howarth. My mum used to live in Mary Street and then we moved to Junction Street, after the war. I ...Read more
A memory of Hulme in 1943 by
Cantray Square
Our family lived at Cantray Home Farm on Cantray Square, where my father George Hay was farm manager to Charlie Monroe. We were 4 sister; Moira, Alice, Catherine and Lilian Hay who all went to Croy School. We walked there past ...Read more
A memory of Croy in 1952 by
Phil & John's Amazing Journey Part 2 Football, Pubs, Old Friends
Stopping briefly outside the Working Men’s Club, the meeting place on Saturday lunchtimes for us Groby footballers before away games, we pass the chippy, the old blacksmiths where the old ...Read more
A memory of Groby in 1970
Highgate Village In The 1960s
What I am most interested in writing about is how Highgate Village has changed so much since my school days, growing up there in the 1960s. Today most of the shops are coffee shops, ...Read more
A memory of Highgate in 1965 by
The Gardens Remembered
I am puzzled as to which year this photo was taken. It must have been very late fifties because my earliest memory of The Rest Garden, as we called it, was when it was still recognizeable as a graveyard. The gravestones ...Read more
A memory of Uxbridge by
Waterhouses Bleak Winters
l remember the pit tubs running under the houses to the colliery where my dad worked down the mines, and when we used to chuck his snap over to him when the tub ran past. Also remember the bleak cold winters ...Read more
A memory of Waterhouses in 1860 by
Captions
1,668 captions found. Showing results 1,105 to 1,128.
The row of cottages on the left is known as Station Terrace, with the post office close to the camera with a post box and stamp machine set into the wall.
Behind the wall on the left stood Winchcombe Abbey, which the people of Winchcombe were given the opportunity to buy when Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries.
The large boat moored along side the pier wall is the RAF boat.
A painted inscription on the wall claims that The Saracen's Head was built in the 11th century. However, the present building dates mainly from the 15th century.
The college, founded in 1379 by William of Wykeham, lies in the shadow of the old city wall.
The Odeon Cinema is built in a contrasting architectural style - a sort of Art Deco with rendered walls and rusticated ground floor as befits a venue to escape from the everyday.
Raikes Road had many thatched dwellings; as late as 1961, when alterations were afoot, one cottage proved to be a Fylde cruck-built cottage with clay and straw walls from the 16th century.
The 1922 post office has taken the place of Castle House which went in 1913 and if you look you will see that the post office building line exactly corresponds to the line of Castle House boundary
This wonderful view from the walls was taken before the onslaught of the motor car, and when gas lamps were still in place.
Two more were built after one another; the second was washed away by floods.This photograph, showing the castle walls and the dome of the Debtors' Prison, was taken from the fourth recorded bridge, which
Many of the buildings can be recognised today, but they are now separated from the water in the harbour by walls supporting a road and a walkway.
If Edward VI had not offered St Stephen's chapel with its facing walls for the Commons, then the lower chamber might have evolved into a round building, as elsewhere in Europe.
Although the castle has never experienced a siege, it has remained a military base, with barracks built inside the walls during the First World War to house conscientious objectors.
The sea wall, recently here completed in reinforced concrete, has since been robustly and massively replaced to repel rising sea levels.
St Mary's church, built on a mound with access to the churchyard via a causeway, is shown in the photograph, and has Roman bricks in the walls.
On the right-hand side of the street stand flint-walled houses with brick dressings.
Michael Sherbrook, rector of Wickersley, wrote: 'All things of price either spoiled, carted away, or defaced to the uttermost.....nothing was spared but the oxhouses and swinecoates and other such houses
The watch-tower in the roof of the new prison was built so the guards could observe all activity in the exercise yards.
The fruit tree climbing up the wall is still there, and so is what looks like a mounting block.
He died in 1936, and his ashes are buried in the church wall just to the right of this tree.
Bishop Hugh le Puiset had attempted to build a Lady Chapel at the east end of the cathedral, but construction was plagued with problems, including walls cracking.
Local dry stone walling, brick and Swithland slate are all here in abundance, as the road drops down from Maplewell Hall to the village centre.
Michael Sherbrook, rector of Wickersley, wrote:'All things of price either spoiled, carted away, or defaced to the uttermost … nothing was spared but the oxhouses and swinecoates and other such houses
Also, the curtain wall was too high for the scaling ladders of the day.
Places (25)
Photos (515)
Memories (1986)
Books (0)
Maps (172)