Maps

7,211 maps found.

1897, Westville Ref. RNE866494
1898, Stockwell Ref. RNE839958
1898, Trinity Ref. RNE853507
1885 - 1887, Newport Ref. HOSM64300
1899-1900, Coleford Ref. RNC675245
1898-1900, Cove Ref. RNC679143
1898-1900, Crook Ref. RNC683935
1900, Fremington Ref. RNC709271
1900, Dipple Ref. RNC691043
1900, Pilton Ref. RNC806217
1946, Ashill Ref. NPO627695
1946, Bonehill Ref. NPO645774
1946, Cockwood Ref. NPO673175
1946, Brixton Ref. NPO650614
1946, Brushford Ref. NPO653502
1899-1900, Merton Ref. RNC778457
1899-1900, Upham Ref. RNC856887
1946, Exton Ref. NPO702440
1946, Hamlet Ref. NPO726077
1946, Hampton Ref. NPO726220

Books

32 books found. Showing results 121 to 144.

Memories

318 memories found. Showing results 51 to 60.

Wood House

Early C20 formal gardens and parkland designed and landscaped by Thomas Mawson and implemented by Robert Mawson of the Lakeland Nurseries, Windermere, surrounding a house designed by Dan Gibson with a ground plan by Thomas ...Read more

A memory of Taw Green by Tonnie Keith

The Oriel, Racecourse And The Later 60 S

The racecourse was pretty much my home all my life, Kempton Avenue. Sorry, a bit of a personal ramble here mixed with my remeniscing about me to put into context; I was born in Ealing in 53 of Welsh family (5 older ...Read more

A memory of Northolt by Nick Parr,

Lovely Braunton

My parents, my aunt and myself moved to Braunton in 1971. We lived next door to the Clarkes who were very kind to us. Although we had moved from a large town house, this house seemed large too - it had a wonderful view right ...Read more

A memory of Braunton in 1971 by Jenny Lister

1950s

Great holidays at Goosemoor Farm with the Ireland family. Jack Bastin worked on the farm. Devon teas at the Southern Cross B and B.

A memory of Newton Poppleford by Peter Ashford

Heather And Gorse Clog Morris Entertain At The Teign House Inn Christow

It was the weekend of the Royal Wedding and on Sunday, the day before the May Bank Holiday, everyone was in a party mood. We took a party of dancers and musicians to the ...Read more

A memory of Christow in 2011 by John Howard Norfolk

Though Tis Dorset, I Thought Twere Devon

When I was a child, I lived at Axminster. My favourite seaside resort was Lyme Regis, about 6 miles away from home. Even though I was told, on countless occasions, that Lyme lay in Dorset, I would not ...Read more

A memory of Lyme Regis by Marjorie Alcock

A Ramble In The Dunsford Nature Reserve And Lunch In The Royal Oak

Today I joined a group of friends on an organized ramble through the Dunsford nature reserve run by the Devon Wildlife Trust. My friends are all dancers and musicians with ...Read more

A memory of Dunsford in 2010 by John Howard Norfolk

North Bovey School

I went to the school and lived in a home in Manaton, we went by coach, it seemed miles away. One of the teacher lived in one of the bungalows on the left just before the school. I have now moved to Devon and been back to see the school and the hall next door it was used for indoor games/gym.

A memory of North Bovey in 1959 by John Sharp

4th Us Infantry Division In Tiverton

I live in Tiverton but only recently discovered that our town hosted the US 4th Infantry Division in the later stages of the 2nd World War. I have been helping the veterans of this Division (The Ivy Division) ...Read more

A memory of Tiverton in 1944 by John Howard Norfolk

My Memories Of Plasterdown Camp

Following my basic training at Crownhill Barracks Plymouth in June 1951 I was transferred to Plasterdown Camp to complete intensive training until October 1951. I was in the Wiltshire Regiment and as I came from ...Read more

A memory of Tavistock in 1951 by Brian Timbrell

Captions

227 captions found. Showing results 121 to 144.

Caption For Sidmouth, The Esplanade And Beach 1934

In the distance we see the great cliff of High Peak - one of the highest points along the Devon coast.

Caption For Babbacombe, The Beach 1925

John Keats was enchanted with the waterside scenery at Babbacombe when he visited, and declared that it offered the finest prospects he had seen in Devon.

Caption For Paignton, Gerston Hotel 1907

The railway (then the South Devon, which was taken over by the great Western in 1878) came to Paignton in 1859, and eventually ran through to Kingswear.

Caption For Exmouth, Rolle Street 1895

Exmouth prospered as a holiday resort - the first in Devon - from the early 18th century, coming into its own when the Continent was closed to visitors during the Napoleonic Wars.

Caption For Landkey, Village C1955

Before the link road between the M5 and Barnstaple was built, Landkey was on the main road out of North Devon. Its long, straggly nature is clear from this photograph.

Caption For Gunnislake, The Village 1908

To the right, Newbridge Hill descends to the Tamar crossing into Devon, with a large chapel on the bend.

Caption For Bucks Mills, The Village 1906

The landscape is far more rugged, and the climate less mild; local writer Charles Kingsley described the weather as combining 'the soft warmth of south Devon with the bracing freshness of the Welsh mountains

Caption For Axmouth, The Village 1898

Axmouth is one of Devon's loveliest villages, and boasts one of Britain's finest and most unspoiled Norman churches.

Caption For Kilmington, The New Inn C1960

Most of East Devon's public houses are extremely ancient, and have served as places of refreshment for centuries.

Caption For Tiverton, The Weir C1955

It is remarkable that instead of running that way, it picks its way across Devon for 55 miles before emptying into the English Channel at Exmouth.

Caption For Bourton On The Water, View From The Memorial C1955

This Roman road runs from the mouth of the River Humber in the north-east of England to Devon in the south-west. So you could say that it has been on the tourist route for thousands of years.

Caption For Cremyll, Point And Hms Impregnable 1904

Cremyll has long been a crossing place from the Rame peninsula to the Devon side of the Tamar estuary.

Caption For Woodbury, The Village C1960

The River Otter meets the sea just to the east of Budleigh Salterton after a 30-mile journey across Somerset and East Devon.

Caption For Beer, Beach 1898

One of Devon's most notorious smugglers, Jack Rattenbury, lived locally two centuries ago.

Caption For Braunton, Village And Church 1936

'The Biggest Village in Devon' is how Braunton likes to be known. This view is of St Brannock's Church.

Caption For Exmouth, Morton Crescent 1906

Exmouth has a good claim to be the first resort in Devon. Wars with France between 1793 and 1815 prevented the wealthy doing the 'Grand Tour', and so they came to Exmouth instead.

Caption For Lyme Regis, Broad Street 1900

Visitors approaching from Devon descend this steep hill to the sea at Lyme. Looking up Broad Street one can see a great variety of inns and hotels.

Caption For Branscombe, General View 1931

The village is certainly one of Devon's prettiest, not least for its setting, strung in a series of hamlets around the junction of several pastoral and wooded combes.

Caption For Beer, The Church 1922

The stone was used extensively for the arcades of many Devon churches.

Caption For Woolacombe, 1906

This one was built by the Chichester family in the 18th century; it burned Welsh limestone, which was held to be superior to the Devon limestone.

Caption For Plymouth, Drake's Island 1890

Now in Cornwall, Mount Edgecumbe, from where this picture was taken, was once part of Devon. The nearby vil- lage of Kingsand still has a stone showing where the boundary used to lie.

Caption For Newark, The River C1965

In 1968, when work was underway on a new Devon Bridge, timber piles and some stonework were discovered on the river bed.

Caption For Badbury Rings, 1899

The trees in the park have all been chamfered up to a certain height to prevent them being grazed by the Bankes family's famous herd of Red Devon cattle.

Caption For Colyton, Church 1907

The unusual octagonal lantern was installed in the 15th century when Colyton was one of the three richest wool towns in Devon. The clock was made in 1710 by Lewis Pridham of Crediton.