Places
19 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Sandy, Bedfordshire
- Sandy Bay, Devon
- Sandy Mouth, Cornwall
- Sandy, Dyfed
- Sandy Carrs, Durham
- Sandy Haven, Dyfed
- Sandy Lane, Clwyd
- Sandy Down, Hampshire
- Sandy Cross, Surrey
- Sandy Cross, Sussex
- Sandy Gate, Devon
- Sandy Bank, Lincolnshire
- Sandy Lane, Wiltshire
- Sandy Way, Isle of Wight
- Chalton, Bedfordshire (near Sandy)
- Sandy Lane, Yorkshire (near Bingley)
- Brook End, Bedfordshire (near Sandy)
- Church End, Bedfordshire (near Sandy)
- Green End, Bedfordshire (near Sandy)
Photos
292 photos found. Showing results 81 to 100.
Maps
115 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 97 to 1.
Memories
288 memories found. Showing results 41 to 50.
Childhood Memories
Wonderful memories of Greatstone. My fifth birthday. A picnic on the vast sandy beach, playing hide & seek in the sand dunes, swimming in the sea-the water I recall was rather murky & the beach very muddy when ...Read more
A memory of Greatstone-on-Sea in 1957 by
Catterick Camp 1944
Following completion of my initial Army training at Squires Gate Camp, Blackpool and at Warley (Essex) I was posted to the School of Signals at Catterick. Le Catau and Baghdad Lines. After several weeks of Training as an ...Read more
A memory of Catterick in 1944
Charlbury Road 1960's
My parents have lived in 34 Charlbury Road since 1967 and I have visited them often over the years, although I have not lived in Shrivenham for any length of time since 1972. I can remember playing in the fields and ...Read more
A memory of Shrivenham in 1967 by
Memories Of Sandy
I lived in Sandy between about 1963 and 1979 and have seen changes even in that short time. It was a fairly quiet village when we first came in spite of the adjacent A1. I went to St Swithuns school in St Neots Road, then Sandy ...Read more
A memory of Sandy by
The Castle Inn
My aunt Dorothy Whitlock was a collector of seashells and black sand. When you enter the Castle Inn you may notice on your left hand side the mural created by her of shells and black sand. I myself now collect shells mainly ...Read more
A memory of West Lulworth by
Long Summer Holidays Happiest Of Times
All those names, so familiar, brings faces from the past like it was yesterday, happy days we took for granted,not realising how lucky we were having such a close group of friends, who looked out for each other ...Read more
A memory of Crook by
My Youth
I was born on the Haworth Road estate and in my childhood roamed all over the district. Chellow Dene was a particular favourite especially in winter when it froze over! Sandy Lane park was another place we visited to go on the swings ...Read more
A memory of Bradford in 1951 by
Chute School
i went to st nicholas school in the mid 70s i lived in chute forrest at 6 orchard cottages.have fond memories of mrs KINGS "bonfire day soup" and mr and mrs MAJORS were the teacchers. was good pals with david cherrington,rowan ...Read more
A memory of Upper Wield by
Rouths/Sharps
my mothers father was william routh sharp who worked for many years in easington colliery as horsekeeper and lived in 11th st. his mother was sarah jane routh, easington and father william james sharp.william routh sharp ...Read more
A memory of Easington Colliery by
A Handy Short Cut
This led down to Castle Terrace where my Auntie Lizzie Cuthbert lived. If I had no money to spend in the baker's, I could nip down here on my way to school. We could course also see the stepping stones - a source of wet ...Read more
A memory of Anstruther Easter by
Captions
186 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.
Here, looking towards Ingoldmells Point, are the sandy beach and the sand dunes, a view now radically changed by the more recent sea defences with a massive concave-fronted sea wall forming a promenade
Hayling Island is 4 miles long and 10 square miles in all, with popular sandy beaches in the south.
From the ever-green valley of the Bourne (whence arose the nucleus of this resort) Bournemouth stretches for miles in either direction upon the sandy cliffs and pine-clad table-land of a gently curving
Three miles south of Sandy we reach Biggleswade, now by- passed by the A1.
The long, sandy beach leading eastwards to Hengistbury Head began to be developed around 1870. The pier was built of iron in 1881, and measured 300 feet in length by 30 feet wide.
The Lincolnshire coast is well known for its sandy beaches, and Mablethorpe and Sutton on Sea are outstanding, as this photograph shows.
The village is at the north end of a magnificent two-mile long sandy beach. Until the 1800s this stretch of coast was remote, its splendours familiar only to Ilfracombe fishermen.
Known today for its caravan parks and the long sandy beach of Black Rock sands, Morfa Bychan, just west of Porthmadog, was long celebrated for the story of Dafydd Garreg-Wen, the blind harpist, known for
This view is taken from the sandy Roman Bank path looking to Chapel Point.
This view shows Carbis Bay when it was still largely undeveloped, with just a scattering of houses above the cliffs overlooking the sandy beach.
Now called the Crown and Sandys Arms, it has a dubious claim to fame - a pop group called the Quarrymen once came here to perform, only to be thrown out because they were 'too scruffy'.
Judging by the way the sand is churned up, the little horse has had a few gallops up and down. The boy with his hands in his pockets seems fascinated by the animal.
The pebble and sandy beach provides views along the coast to Worthing pier; just a short distance inland are the grassy slopes of Highdown Hill, which has long been a popular recreational
Beyond the trees are sandy but dangerous beaches, where the tide comes in faster than a man can run.
The bay, with its wide sandy beach, was almost certainly the landing place of the Danish brothers Hengist and Horsa, who came to Britain in 449AD to fight for the British king Vortigern against the
The sandy beach stretched for miles in each direction, and the seafront road ran for two miles.
The others are Bailey, Bull Hill, Portmore, Sandy Down, Walhampton, and Boldre itself.
The pebbly storm beach gives way to a vast fine sandy beach, covered in this photograph by a high tide.
A local labourer and his dog pose obligingly for the camera on the sandy path leading from the summit of Leith Hill, at 967ft the highest point in the south-eastern counties.
The splendid sandy beach, which is so firm that tennis may be played on it, extends eastward for three miles beneath a range of beautiful cliffs.
Holidaymakers and day trippers have been drawn to the sandy beach at the mouth of the Seaton valley.
This is a good view of one of the few places with access to a good beach for many miles of slate coast, although even then the sand is covered at high tide. Gull Rock is offshore.
East of Sandy, the small village of Sutton is distinguished by its narrow medieval pack-horse bridge which took pedlars and carriers' pack ponies dry-shod past the ford, which is still in use today.
Sandsend was just three miles along the sandy beach from Whitby.
Places (19)
Photos (292)
Memories (288)
Books (1)
Maps (115)