Places
6 places found.
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Photos
2,394 photos found. Showing results 1,121 to 1,140.
Maps
41 maps found.
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Memories
2,822 memories found. Showing results 561 to 570.
Re: The People Of Kilfinan
It was lovely to see the Ferguson’s mentioned in David Goodman's article. I was born in 1947 and spent many happy summer holidays there, in the 50’s and early 60’s. We got the post van from Tighnabruaich. My father James ...Read more
A memory of Kilfinan by
Gamblesby Memories
My grandparents moved from Whitley Bay to Ainstable in 1948 when my grandfather retired (Jack and Kate Storey). My parents moved with them, and then took the Red Lion at Gamblesby in 1952 (Jack and Ethel Storey). I had a ...Read more
A memory of Gamblesby in 1951 by
Craft Cottage
My grandmother Doris Palmer, lived in Craft Cottage which is right next to the pump. We spent all our family holidays there during the 50's and 60's. Granny was a war widow and she worked in Adams tobacconist, which was on the ...Read more
A memory of Steyning in 1958 by
Working At The Pleasaunce
I worked at The Pleasaunce from 1958 - 1961. My memories of wonderful Christmas house parties, and 'tradesmens' parties on New Years Day when all the tradesmen who had any contact with the Pleasaunce over the year, ...Read more
A memory of Overstrand in 1958
Nanny Goats Common
My friend used to live in one of the small cottages on Nannygoats Common. I think there was a scrap metal merchant who also lived in same row, I think his name was Tiny Wakefield. Today flats and more flats dominate this area, ...Read more
A memory of Dagenham in 1956
Memories Of A War Time Evacuee
I spent 3 years at Dumbrell's Farm, Milton Street, Sussex. I was a little Birmingham evacuee (aged 9 years). I went to school at Alfriston, my 'Uncle John' took me fishing in the River Cuckmere and we went ...Read more
A memory of Milton Street in 1940 by
Working At The Bowling Alley
Having returned from Australia, I got a job as controller 4 nights and Sundays, it was a great scene, what with the disco downstairs, the bar upstairs, a barber shop, restaurant, 24 lanes, and a juke box with great ...Read more
A memory of Cippenham in 1966 by
Strawberries For Tea
Every year on my birthday my mother and father made June 21st. (or the closest Saturday) a very special day for me. Since I was old enough to remember I had strawberries on my birthday. However, that was not all. The ...Read more
A memory of Buckhurst Hill by
Growing Up In Pembridge
I was born in 1960 at Glanarrow Cottages, Bridge St. All my early memories are of a happy childhood. I can remember the deep snow of 1963, when I opened the back door it seemed that the snow was halfway up it!!! I can ...Read more
A memory of Pembridge by
The Institute School Upper Bradford Street Brainree
The Institute School, was opposite the White Hart Hotel, Upper Bradford Street, Braintree. I attended this school c.1950-51. Then Principal was Miss A Thompson; teachers remembered were Miss ...Read more
A memory of Braintree in 1950 by
Captions
2,020 captions found. Showing results 1,345 to 1,368.
This row of flint and brick cottages are in the style of the 17th century, but they have the date 1844 over the porch.
The 17th century millworkers' cottages are now part of hotel accommodation.
The cottages are now all private dwellings - the one with the shop blind has a pretty bay window today.
White House cottage to its right, at the end of Bunker's Row, has now been demolished.
In 1921 a catering business was started at Bracebridge Cottages and in 1983 it became Bobby Brown's.
The village was, of course, much smaller then, with just four sizeable families and a dozen cottages.
In this view the Beehive shop and the dormered cottage beyond survive, but the buildings beyond have been rebuilt for Townsends and the Post Office.
The statue of Queen Victoria, which still stands on the corner, was taken from the front of the stone mason's house, Victoria Cottage, with the scaffolding (beyond the garage).
I doubt if she had many amenities in that little cottage. TV aerials are absent: this was still the radio age, and television was a crude and expensive luxury.
The river is crossed on a toll bridge; this view shows the toll gate and cottage, the former now replaced by a booth and barrier ten yards beyond.
Instead the carving was in the garden of a cottage called, appropriately enough, The Elephant and Castle.
The Kent-Sussex border divides the village in two, but this area, the older part with tile-hung cottages clustered around a triangular green, is in Kent.
Visitors staying in these cottages would enjoy a quiet holiday walking the marshy banks of the estuary and the surrounding heathlands, or boating and fishing.
It remains a village of beautiful cottages on the high road between Exeter and Dorchester.
There was also a tannery, sited well away from the cottages because of its smell.
Beside the clapboarded cottage is Franklin`s butcher`s shop. This used to get flushed out and cleaned once a week, sending water coursing down the street. Next door is the Co-op drapery.
Here we see the Black Rock, Black Rock Quarry and Black Rock Cottage, and behind is the bridge over the railway.
Further on is a row of Victorian terraced cottages, with dormer and bay windows. On the right, the parked cars wait for petrol or repairs at Fisher's garage with its Esso sign.
The attractive Beehive Cottage on the right was originally the lodge to Captain Stopford's house on Ashby Road. That house, alas, was demolished, and the site used to build the Community Centre.
The 18th- and early 19th-century cottages on the left face the timber-framed house, which was built as a single dwelling in 1540; it is continuously jettied with a hearth-passage entrance
In World War II the big house was commandeered for housing American officers, and Christie moved to the thatched cottage on the quay.
This is another picturesque Hampshire village, home to a good selection of perfect whitewashed thatched cottages.
On the right is Old Forge Cottage, which adjoined the blacksmith's shop.
Winding, hedge-bound lanes and low-built cottages thatched with wheat straw were typical of Inskip, Treales, Wharles and other Fylde villages.
Places (6)
Photos (2394)
Memories (2822)
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Maps (41)