Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Barnard Castle, Durham
- Bishop's Castle, Shropshire
- Castle Douglas, Dumfries and Galloway
- Castle Combe, Wiltshire
- Castle Cary, Somerset
- Corfe Castle, Dorset
- Castle Bolton, Yorkshire
- Burgh Castle, Norfolk (near Great Yarmouth)
- Belvoir Castle, Leicestershire
- Castle Hedingham, Essex
- Rowlands Castle, Hampshire
- Castle Acre, Norfolk
- Balmoral Castle, Grampian
- Castle Rising, Norfolk
- Castle Ashby, Northamptonshire
- Castle Bromwich, West Midlands
- Castle Eden, Durham
- Redmire, Yorkshire (near Castle Bolton)
- Castle Donington, Leicestershire
- Gwrych Castle, Clwyd
- Urquhart Castle, Highlands
- Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire
- Cholmondeley Castle, Cheshire
- Wardour Castle, Wiltshire
- Dunstaffnage Castle, Strathclyde
- Raby Castle, Durham
- Crichton Castle, Lothian
- Lumley Castle, Durham
- Dunnottar Castle, Grampian
- Elcho Castle, Tayside
- Elmley Castle, Hereford & Worcester
- Barcaldine Castle, Strathclyde
- Midmar Castle, Grampian
- Hanley Castle, Hereford & Worcester
- Castle Bytham, Lincolnshire
- Kincardine Castle, Grampian
Photos
10,187 photos found. Showing results 1,181 to 1,200.
Maps
432 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 1,417 to 4.
Memories
826 memories found. Showing results 591 to 600.
Just Memories Of My Childhood
My family moved to Rochester during the war ( a naval family). We lived in Union Street until it was demolished for the new police station. We had a small gang, four strong and we roamed far and wide during the long ...Read more
A memory of Rochester in 1946 by
My First Memory Of Ballygally.
My first memory of Ballygally was arriving at my auntie Mary's house, The Fourscore. It was at the top of the loaning and had a stream nearby, the house was surrounded by fields. I had lived in London since after ...Read more
A memory of Ballygally in 1954 by
White Mice
This was one of my favourite places as a child. My aunty lived in Thorpeness and we used to stay with her in the summer. We would often come to the beach at Warblerswick, and then go to The Dutch Barn. My earliest memory is probably ...Read more
A memory of Southwold in 1965 by
Happy Holidays
My Aunty had a house right on the dunes. We stayed with her every summer until I was about 16 or 17 and a lot of our time was spent on the beach. When the tide went out there was sand beyond the shingle and we used to spend hours ...Read more
A memory of Thorpeness in 1968 by
Happy Childhood Days
My husband, Roger Watts, and his family lived in Castle St in the 1950's. The picture has a figure standing outside their front door (no.15) which could be his mother or older sister Linda. Can anybody shed some light on this ? ...Read more
A memory of Aylesbury by
Castle Howard
Can any one remember Cheyann. Turner Blacky Whitey was the Headmistress, Agard was in the laundry. I stood on that little yard a few times. Cons I remember are Hays P Parry the Mc Murrys from Hull. I went down the super car track ...Read more
A memory of Stanhope in 1960 by
Learning To Swim
I moved to Dartmouth in 1948 with my mother, Joan and father, Joseph Gower. We lived in Southford Road and in the summer walked out to Castle Cove. There were still changing huts above the small pool, seen here below the Castle ...Read more
A memory of Dartmouth in 1952 by
John St Dundee
Hi, I lived at No 4 John St from 1948 to about 1960 before moving to Ann Field St and then up the Hilltown to Ann St (Carnegie Tower). The town council must have found out that I had moved down to the West Midlands, for when I looked ...Read more
A memory of Dundee in 1960 by
Carlisle Great Fair
Hi Does any one have any pics of the Carlisle Great Fair, late 1970s. Or the year where there quite a lot of WW2 trucks, Jeeps, Fire Engines and even a WW2 German Kubel Car. We all met up in the Castle first, then we followed the ...Read more
A memory of Carlisle by
Long Ago And Far Away
I was born in Slough in 1943 and lived in Cippenham until I was fourteen when we moved to Canada. Cippenham was the perfect place to grow up: a short bus ride to town, and a short walk to the open country, Burnham Abbey, and ...Read more
A memory of Cippenham by
Captions
1,894 captions found. Showing results 1,417 to 1,440.
These half-timbered houses, overlooked by the 15th-century church of St Mary the Virgin, were once homes for local tradesmen from the Jacobean Chilham Castle estate.
These features included a tower-keep separated from the rest of the castle by its own moat, multiangular towers, and ornate machicolations of the type seen here adorning the tops of the hexagonal corner
Here we see the castle after its restoration by the Marquis of Bute. The main residential block, including the great hall, was sited along the south side of the inner curtain wall.
Like its twin castle of Pendennis on the opposite side of the river mouth, St Mawes was built on the orders of Henry VIII to guard the entrance to Carrick Roads.
This post office and hardware shop is near to the church of St Andrew, the church hall that was previously the village school, and the Castle of Comfort pub.
Behind the cameraman lie the castle remains, outside whose gates the medieval market town was established.
At the left is the corner of John Carr of York’s Georgian County Gaol of 1787: no attempt here to match the castle’s Gothic architecture.
There are the earthworks also of the Norman castle in the north-east quarter of the town.
On the east side of the village, this is an undernourished Non- conformist chapel, in a sense a poor relation of the Methodist church in Castle Donington.
Ancient Lostwithiel was once the capital of Cornwall, and on a slope above the town are the ruins of the 12th-century Restormel Castle, owned by the Dukes of Cornwall.
Its ancient castle overlooks the harbour.
background are no longer imposing town houses; one is now the offices of the Phoenix Assurance Co, and the other, Warwick house and former home of brewer Samuel Sketchley, has been converted into the Castle
Instead the carving was in the garden of a cottage called, appropriately enough, The Elephant and Castle.
Its name is said to derive from a Saxon, Gromen (which translates simply as 'the man' or 'groom'), who built a moated castle where the 17th-century private house Groombridge Place now stands.
Although Arthur Conan Doyle set his novel 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' in Dartmoor, he got his inspiration here – the Baskerville family once owned Eardisley's castle and the story of the black
On the east side of the village, this is an undernourished Non- conformist chapel, in a sense a poor relation of the Methodist church in Castle Donington.
The west range of the castle to the right dates back to the 13th century, whereas the heavily fenestrated north range to the left is Elizabethan, the work of Sir John Perrot, half-brother
In the summer, ferries regularly run to Hurst Castle, and there are boats to the Isle of Wight.
On the left are steps leading down to the beach, the Castle Hotel is centre right and a trumpet player is practising front right!
There was a castle here, which was besieged by King Stephen in 1138, but its keep has long gone; only its outline is marked on the grass of its hill at the end of Bailey Street.
This view looks from in front of Exchequer Gate towards the Castle.
At the left is the corner of John Carr of York's Georgian County Gaol of 1787: no attempt here to match the castle's Gothic architecture.
At the left is the corner of John Carr of York's Georgian County Gaol of 1787: no attempt here to match the castle's Gothic architecture.
The only action the castle ever saw was in 1216, when it was occupied by the French at the invitation of the barons rebelling against King John. COMPTON, Loseley
Places (141)
Photos (10187)
Memories (826)
Books (4)
Maps (432)