Places
10 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,534 photos found. Showing results 961 to 980.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
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Memories
8,173 memories found. Showing results 481 to 490.
Stephensons Shop
The house on the left, when I was a child in the 60's was Stephensons Shop. We called there for sweets on our way down to Water End to visit relatives.
A memory of Holme by
My Bus To School From Hatch End To Pinner Grammar School
My bus to school, Pinner Grammar, went from this stop in Uxbridge Road in the centre of the picture. It was a red London Transport double-decker route 209 that took us all the way to Cannon ...Read more
A memory of Hatch End in 1956 by
St Johns The Scary
As a child I was terrified of the churchyard, we had to walk past it to get to Wilson Way where my Nan Lizzie Grocott lived. It wasn't so bad in the summer but in winter when it got dark early we would get off the bus opposite ...Read more
A memory of Goldenhill in 1972 by
Local Shop
My grandparents (Alan and Doris Hartley) used to have a bungalow on Boat Cliffe Road, this shop was at the bottom of the road. We used to go to Reighton Gap every school holiday and had some fantastic times there. I think I recall a ...Read more
A memory of Reighton in 1976 by
Fish And Chip Shop Smart's Fish Saloon
Ref: Smarts Fish Saloon, Bishopstoke - it was as a boy in the early forties that we visited this shop to buy fish and chips and more often to buy a pennyworth of scraps which sometimes had a few chips in ...Read more
A memory of Bishopstoke in 1943 by
Hop Picking
Paddock Wood, in particular Beltring, the home of the famous Whitebread Oasts, was the centre of the Hop Gardens of Kent. The Gardens were set out with rows of elevated wire tressles which were supported at intervals by poles. In ...Read more
A memory of Paddock Wood in 1940 by
Bricklayers Arms
Researching my family history I have found the sale papers for the Bricklayers Arms. It was sold by my Great Grandmother, her husband was Frederick Easom Robinson. It was sold on Friday 8th august 1890. The sale was for Brewhouse ...Read more
A memory of Whittlesey in 1890 by
Help Me Identify My Grandfather's Fish And Game Shop.
My grandfather, Cecil Carter and wife Winnifred Carter were owners of a fish and game shop during the second world war. I would like to know the street name and the name of the shop. The shop was ...Read more
A memory of Reigate by
A Plumrose Representative Who Called At Whitehaven Buying Group
In the 1960's I used to call on members of Whithaven Buying Group and Take transfer orders for Plumrose Ltd Products. They were famous for their Chopped ham and pork , luncheon ...Read more
A memory of High Harrington by
Wallsend
while i was at the western I used to deliver papers in area of palmer bui;dings ,mark street ,charles street etc,,the newsagents was at high street east a Mr Mcgucken or something like that ..On sundays we met up at Wallsend railway station ...Read more
A memory of Wallsend by
Captions
3,478 captions found. Showing results 1,153 to 1,176.
An antique chandelier and fireplace shop is now where the Balcombe Stores were.
The Marine Hotel can be seen in the distance, and the shop sign on the extreme left reads 'R S Skinner—Baker, Confectioner'.
Oats Lane on the left, named after the Oats family who for many generations were the local millers, is still a narrow by-road, but the Green in the distance has been developed with a One Stop shop, a bus
The road here has since been widened with the demolition of the butcher's shop - can you see the legs of meat hanging outside the window of Mason's?
This view shows the High Street devoid of traffic, with the shops of Melias Ltd, grocers, and Storey Cooper, drapers, with their summer awnings out.
This busy mid 20th-century street scene shows a fine collection of shop fronts.
In the 1890s Deansgate was one of the main shopping streets and commercial districts.
On the left are the Church Rooms, and just beyond is the then village shop, an adjunct to a residential cottage.
Two old farmhouses facing the High Street have shops - one of them advertises bed and breakfast (right).
The High Street's shabby Victorian buildings and wide variety of shops have been familiar to generations of holidaymakers and tourists on coming ashore.
Francis Frith had already set up a stockist to sell his postcards; the display board is to the left of the shop window.
The names on the shops may have changed since 1896, and the fashions moved on, but essentially this scene is little different from that of today, with one major exception - there is a total absence of
The Hovis sign over the shop (left) would now be a collector's item, and so would the delivery van opposite.
Here, a man looks thoughtfully in the shop window on the left.
In those days it was Fosters for clothes and the Corner Shop for wines, spirits, Butler’s Ales, and the dreaded Armadillo sherry.
Three of the terraced houses on the right were once shops. On the opposite corner, Skoulding's grocer's and draper's had traded since the 1850s.
There are now no shops on this corner. Traffords Stores (right) is now a house, and so is the General Stores (left), where both the window and door are bricked up.
On the right, Pearson Bros, Farmer's music store, TN Parr's pork shop and the Cavendish furniture store were well- established businesses.
The tramlines moved heavy goods between the Market Place shop of ironmonger Robert Spence and his warehouses in Friars Wynd.
By the end of the 17th century it had been rapidly developed by the building of shops, taverns, hotels and houses as the town flourished as a fashionable spa resort.
In those days it was Fosters for clothes and the Corner Shop for wines, spirits, Butler's Ales, and the dreaded Armadillo sherry.
On the left is Rankin's, a well-known draper's shop, and between them and the Regent Theatre is Hawke's confectioners.
Like so many villages, however, Ullenhall has lost its shops, post office, school and vicarage.
The 1950s were the last profitable heyday for these small and diverse local traders before the arrival of supermarkets changed British shopping habits for ever.
Places (10)
Photos (2534)
Memories (8173)
Books (0)
Maps (71)