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Books
15 books found. Showing results 97 to 15.
Memories
5,802 memories found. Showing results 41 to 50.
Two Days Full
My husband and I were visiting the UK in 2019 and checking out areas ancestors had lived in. One of these was Corfe Castle, specifically Ower Farm. When we arrived in Corfe we noticed the visitor center, went in and I asked if there ...Read more
A memory of Corfe Castle by
Hassobury School
Doze any one remember hassobury school hazel end when miss camp was head of school miss Williams miss evans miss Dollier miss Dunlop back 1969 lovely school can any one remember the school
A memory of Farnham by
Grindrod Family
My Great Grandparents, Jim and Elizabeth Grindrod, lived at 10 Sydney Street, along with my Grandfather, Brian Grindrod, and my Great Great Grandparents, Michael York and Lily York. From the 1930s- late 1940s, Jim was a Grocer's ...Read more
A memory of Failsworth by
Bramcote Hospital
I was there in 1982 or 83 (can't remember that clearly) for maybe 6 months. I was 8. I have similar memories to other commenters of the people who stood out there. There was a school on site. The P.E. teacher, made us run ...Read more
A memory of Bramcote
Heswall Beach
I remember staying at the hospital and going to Heswall beach and playing on the aeroplane in the back garden at the hospital,it was about 1965
A memory of Heswall by
Nurses Hostel
Started out as isolation hospital for scarlet fever(?) Used as nurses hostel for nurses from Cliveden, they were taken by coach, was at the back of site, backed onto Aspros( later Sara Lee?) factory, they built Westgate School on e ...Read more
A memory of Cippenham by
Learning To Swim On The Rye
I was born in Amersham Hospital in 1956. It should have been the Shrubbery, but it was full on the day I decided I had had enough of the womb. Cut to the mid 60's and I'm a student at Crown House Primary in London Road ...Read more
A memory of High Wycombe by
Lord Mayor Treloars Hospital 1953 1958
Starting when I was eleven I was a patient over 5 years for three spells, 2 years, 18 months and 9 months with an infected hip joint which became a deep routed abscess. Many different ‘ new’ antibiotics were tried to ...Read more
A memory of Alton by
Sgt. Thomas Plaisted
I was stationed at Lakenheath from 1965 until 1968. I was a member of the 1979th Communications Squadron. While there, I was on the base softball team. We were realy good and won the UK Championship three consecutive years. Our ...Read more
A memory of Lakenheath by
Cambridge Hospital.
I used to live in Denmark square and I was 11 years of age. My friend Donna Meek lived in the army quarters. We used to adventure out behind the Cambridge hospital, were there was clear signs of bunkers that had been bombed, the old ...Read more
A memory of Aldershot by
Captions
969 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.
This one, with the beck running through it, was built up in the 19th century to house workers at the nearby mill, where for a hundred years John Wilford & Sons produced linen, flax and wool.
Quarrying for limestone and copper brought new people to this quiet agricultural village - mines were still operating in the 1920s.
Originally sited on a ford over Firgreen Beck, Clifford was at one time the manor that included all of nearby Boston Spa.
This stream, the Lode Pit Beck, flows off the moor into the Aire at Shipley.
Catterick has three greens; this one looks along Sour Beck to the 15th-century parish church of St Anne, financed by the owners of nearby Brough Hall.
On the western edge of the North York Moors, Osmotherly was a centre for milling, weaving and clog making, and it grew considerably in the hundred years from 1750.
Children pose near the small bridge over Downham Beck, a brook which runs through the heart of the village.
Children pose near the small bridge over Downham Beck, a brook which runs through the heart of the village.
An Exmouth boatman stands barefoot on the Esplanade seeking customers for the many boat trips on offer.
Looking back the other way we see West Cliff.
Legend relates that a Saxon king, on a progress through his realm, wondered how he could cross a creek without getting his feet wet.
Most of Market Street was taken up by the now demolished Red Lion.
Photographed in the year it was built, this church had seating for 800 people, and a commodious schoolroom at the back. The
Set in a most attractive position on the shore of Restronguet Creek off the Carrick Roads, the old thatched inn was once owned by the captain of the 'Pandora', which sailed to the South Pacific to
Legend relates that a Saxon king, on a progress through his realm, wondered how he could cross a creek with- out getting his feet wet.
Although Beeching axed the trains on this line, he left this magnificent structure as it was.
The first of the road traffic tunnels to be dug under the River Mersey, the Queensway Tunnel was opened by King George V and Queen Mary on 18 July 1934.
Legend relates that a Saxon king, on a progress through his realm, wondered how he could cross a creek without getting his feet wet.
We are looking back the other way from R16047, with Sparks bakery and restaurant next door to the local branch of W H Smith (left).
Very few changes have been made to this attractive 16th-century coaching inn since the photograph was taken.
At the bottom of the street is the bridge over the River Bollin and the Manor house.
One of the darkest deeds in English history took place in Saxon times, when King Edward was murdered, probably by order of his stepmother, in 978.
Born in Cambridge in 1882, Sir John Berry 'Jack' Hobbs was undoubtedly the world's greatest cricket batsman of his time.
At the north end of the park the focus is a statue of Albert, Queen Victoria's Prince Consort, who had died in 1861 and in whose honour the estate had been named.
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