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 981 to 515.
Maps
172 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,986 memories found. Showing results 491 to 500.
The Spring Tavern
Does any one remember The Spring Tavern? I have a oil painting that was given to my Grandfather Reuben Pickup, I believe that the picture once hung on the wall of The Spring Tavern, and that it was given to my Grandfather in payment ...Read more
A memory of Crewe by
Ark In The Square: Polesworth
I had heard so much about this village & surrounding areas from my father, Arch Wallbank, who was born 1896 @ 46 Watling St. the corner of New st. he left for NZ in Oct. 1913 & died Auckland 1965.. My Knight ...Read more
A memory of Polesworth by
Waterloo Chapel Bath Street Liverpool
Hi I was born in Westkirby the Wirral but have been living in Denmark since Iwas 18. The other day I came across an old box at a car boot sale in Denmark with the letters Waterloo Chapel Liverpool ...Read more
A memory of Waterloo
Peel Street School
My grandmother and her brothers and sisters attended this school as did my mother and moi. I have many memories of the school. Endless games of football in the yard, rain or shine. Two frightening headmistress Lord and Riley. ...Read more
A memory of Cloughfold by
Fishmongers
My family lived in commercial road . there was river opposite and field full i think wheat? as young person i had play in back yard as swans kept coming over the garden brick wall. we lived for some time. at the very end of the long road ...Read more
A memory of Staines by
Hyde Road
It seem a long time ago now but still very clear. I moved to Hyde Road in West Gorton from Dane Bank when I was 2 years old. My parents had the newsagents on the corner of Hyde Road and Sherwin street. I went to Thomas Street Primary ...Read more
A memory of Gorton by
Wade Deacon Grammar School Widnes Another Memory
Practising for the Town Sports on the front lawn of school, I was 'doing javelin' My class-mate Ardrie Van der Wall (Dutch) was 'doing discus' I threw my javelin, and went to retrieve it, whilst Ardrie ...Read more
A memory of Widnes by
Empire Road Litherland
My name was Barbara Beattie, I was born in 16 Empire rd linacre road in 1952 no longer there now, I would love to hear other peoples memories of growing up there , ie we played in the street in the summer till 9 oclock at ...Read more
A memory of Litherland by
Barr Farm
I owned Barr Farm for twelve years, and poured my heart and soul into that building, the views from our living room out across the canal to the Campsie Fells was beautiful. The Antonine wall ran through my garden, once an Italian couple ...Read more
A memory of Twechar by
Location, Halfway Along The Beach Between Thorpe Hall Boulevard And The Broadway.
Location clue - the glazed, cream-painted passenger shelter atop the sea wall, originally built as the Terminus Station for the Esplanade Trams, then taken over by the ...Read more
A memory of Thorpe Bay by
Captions
1,668 captions found. Showing results 1,177 to 1,200.
Fifteen children have been neatly assembled by the photographer in front of the brick and half-timbered cottages that comprised this small village – it was originally called Clandon Abbots.
A yacht in full sail races past a well-known landmark on the lower Bure, pulling its dinghy behind. A motor cruiser chugs its way along the north bank.
Stand across the road, roughly in the spot where this picture was taken, and you will see that little has changed, apart from a few more trees, some road signs and plenty of traffic.
Beyond the approaching car, is part of the tall gable wall of the Stanley Works, which was still functioning as a boot and shoe factory in the1950s.
The railings have gone, as have the brick wall and the trees behind it. The shop under the white blind is now named Something Fishy.
This view of Cottesmore is typical of Rutland's visual feast of limestone and ironstone villages, set in a rolling, spired landscape of hedges and walls which the hunt can, in the main, take in its stride
The whipping post has iron manacles of three different sizes to fit all comers!
The Bell and Crown inn is now called the Cloisters; Gibbs Mew was the main Salisbury brewery, now sadly no longer with us.
There is safe bathing for children at high tide, protected from the open sea and its waves, behind the North Wall of the harbour.
The Pilot's Pier light sits on a long promontory extending from the sea wall, and cargo shipping and the associated tug boats pass by it on their way in and out of the port.
This area of Malmesbury was once called the Sheep Fair; it is in the parish of Westport, which by the late 19th century became a civil parish of westport St Mary Within.
The boundary walls on the left are in Blue Lias rubble stone left unpainted, while the lean-to at the left of Manor Cottage behind the huntsman has its rubble thickly limewashed.
Note the stone mounting block by the wall.
The Local Board have expended £14,000 on a sea-wall and fine esplanade, and the pier, 1,000 feet in length, cost £5,000.
Scarborough Castle, on the skyline, once stood 100 ft tall, with walls 12 ft thick; the keep was positioned in such a way so as to command the approach to the causeway leading to the castle.
Following the demolition of Shipley Old Hall in Kirkgate, parts of the building - a wall, water chutes and a roof truss - were re-erected in this park.
The grammar school moved out of its old buildings (now the Town Hall) to a new twenty-acre site set in fields north of St Peter's church in 1891.
On the wall is a bubble gum machine, once a popular feature of the frontage of every village store in the country.
It is a quirky building in leaded light vernacular style, and the boundary wall has milestones set in giving distances to Edinburgh, London and York.
The tiny flint-walled church of St Mary was rebuilt c1135, and is one of the smallest in the county. It is only 60ft long, and consists of a nave and a lower chancel.
This was the main exit from the walled city of York. Bootham Bar was built on the site of the Roman gate, and probably much of the stone was re-used.
All else survives except the shop-in-a-shed. This is the frantically busy A330 and the wall on the right, to Holyport Lodge, has been moved back for road widening.
However, none of the buildings survive, although the dock walls and the entrance abutments in the distance remain.
Bronze plaques on the adjacent walls carry more than 3000 names.
Places (25)
Photos (515)
Memories (1986)
Books (0)
Maps (172)