Places
20 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Hinkley Point Power Stations, Somerset
- Lyne Station, Borders
- Perranwell Station, Cornwall
- Ferryhill Station, Durham
- Nantyronen Station, Dyfed
- Station Hill, Cumbria
- Station Town, Durham
- Widdrington Station, Northumberland
- Eggesford Station, Devon
- Bedlington Station, Northumberland
- Meopham Station, Kent
- Mintlaw Station, Grampian
- Ratho Station, Lothian
- Uphall Station, Lothian
- Alne Station, Yorkshire
- Hart Station, Cleveland
- Otterham Station, Cornwall
- Udny Station, Grampian
- Balfron Station, Central Scotland
- Ruthwell Station, Dumfries and Galloway
Photos
2,456 photos found. Showing results 1,021 to 1,040.
Maps
73 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
3,079 memories found. Showing results 511 to 520.
East Boldon Station Terrace
We had a Doctor called Andrew Forbes who had his surgery above the shops.He called me his pinup girl,as everytime i had to see him as a child i had my knickers held up with safety pins !! Nearly 20 yrs later he attended the birth of my first baby ,a home birth ,and remembererd his pinup girl
A memory of East Boldon in 1946 by
From The 2nd World War
My grandparents lived at The Cottage in South View, Uppingham for 40 years from 1908 where he was a well known Director of Music at the public school. From a very early age during the second world war I made my first ...Read more
A memory of Uppingham in 1943 by
Brought Up In 60's 70's
I lived with my mother and grandparents in a row of cottages near the station. we had no bathroom but used a tin bath once a week in the kitchen. We had an outside toilet and our water was spring water. my grandad ...Read more
A memory of Grindleford by
Police Station
I have only just found this site. I was born in 1944 in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, my Mom was sent there as bombs were falling still in the London area and Woodford was still getting there fair share. We lived in an alleyway ...Read more
A memory of Woodford Bridge in 1947 by
Llantwit
I remember LLantwit with love, having spent many happy holidays there. I still recall the warm summer days spent playing with the local children and snowy winters, snug in my Nan's house celebrating Christmas with family and friends. In ...Read more
A memory of Gileston in 1952 by
Memories Of Council Estate And Football
My family moved to the council estate in Elstree in the mid sixties. I used to play football on the pitch opposite Hill House, now sadly a new housing estate. Robert Stores for groceries, the aptly named ...Read more
A memory of Elstree in 1967 by
Drapers Shop Connaught Avenue
My great great grandmother, Eliza Hone, ran a Drapers Shop in Station Rd (later Connaught Avenue), after she was widowed from the late 1800's and she was included on 1901 & 1911Census's. My grandmother, ...Read more
A memory of Frinton-On-Sea in 1900 by
Sutton High Street In The 60s And 70s
Sutton Station holds some great memories from the 60's, including childhood summer holidays. Before we had a car I remember catching the express 'corridor train' to the south coast...so exciting! I live in ...Read more
A memory of Sutton
Growing Up In Gildersome
I was born in 1952 and lived in Gildersome until I was 19 years old. My name until then was Lorraine Thompson. I have many happy memories of living in the village. Until I was 4 years old I lived in a terrace called ...Read more
A memory of Gildersome in 1952 by
Oak Way, Acton Vale
My memories of Acton Vale estate are endless, you would play out all day and the days were long. I can remember taking back the empty lemonade bottles and then buying a jublie. Going swimming at Acton swimming baths then on the ...Read more
A memory of Acton by
Captions
1,403 captions found. Showing results 1,225 to 1,248.
The scene is recognisable today, though the National Benzole petrol station on the left has gone, and so has the long stone wall on the right.
Bramley stands about four miles south of Guildford on the Horsham Road; it is a long village with a busy crossroads with Station Road (there has been no railway since the 1960s).
The fine late 19th-century shopfronts to the right have mostly gone by Smith Brothers is still a stationers, JPS.
The popular Century Cinema was built in 1937 on the corner of Kingsway Road and Station Way.
The simple but somehow graceful shop fronts have gone, although the buildings remain, including the Old Fire Station of 1873, with its prominent tower.
Between the underground station and the parish church, this is a wonderful neo-Tudor pub of 1936 by A E Sewell; he also designed the Crown and Anchor in High Street, Chipping Barnet, and the Goat near
Here a Royal Air Force coastal radar station slipped down the cliffs on 14 May 1942. Its concrete and brick remains are entombed in the undercliff.
This is the main shopping street, and it leads up to the Victorian clock tower at one end from the railway station at the other.
The hotel served both the community (which had grown greatly in the 19th century after the colliery was opened) and railway travellers, for it stands near where the pre-Beeching station was.
On the top of the hill is the outer navigation station for Heathrow Airport, used by the Trans-Atlantic flights.
The petrol station on the right has been replaced by a 1970s pair of houses.
In September 1645 the Scots considered stationing troops here, and the castle was in fact besieged by the Royalists between August and September 1648.
Certainly the men of Walmer, who have manned the lifeboat stationed here since 1856, have good cause to regard the sea and weather with caution.
Eastcote is a mediaeval settlement; it is only as one emerges from the shopping parades of the 1930s grouped around the underground station into a series of timber-framed vernacular buildings of the 16th
Back in more mundane Kingsbury Road, Station Parade, with its paper-thin symmetry and air of parsimony sets the mercenariness of suburban development before us.
However, a new station was now planned with a sizeable refreshment room; behind that was growing a town decidedly Edwardian in style.
The southern terminus station of the Bluebell Railway to East Grinstead is nearby.
The corner stationer's is still just that. The market day is Friday. The whole square is the property of the Duchy of Lancaster, states a notice in the shelter in the middle of the square.
By 1925, the Promenade behind the boat station was fully developed; here it is being used by a variety of vehicles - a charabanc, a horse and trap, a motor car and an invalid carriage
One of Berkshire's finest villages is Sutton Courtenay, with the cooling towers of Didcot Power Station a constant companion to the south.
Sheffield Park Gardens were magnificently landscaped by Capability Brown and are open to visitors.They also contain the National Pinetum collection of pine trees.The southern terminus station
, is a fine half-timbered house.The Norman church of St Giles is at the north end of the village.Along a footpath nearby is a well-restored watermill with a wooden overshot waterwheel.The railway station is
Hall from the north, showing the main entrance and driveway, the view that house party guests would first see upon arriving by carriage, having been brought up from the Pease's nearby private station
This view of Station Road is taken from the railway footbridge looking north-east. Sussex Towns From Chichester to Uckfield
Places (20)
Photos (2456)
Memories (3079)
Books (0)
Maps (73)