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 1,341 to 515.
Maps
172 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,986 memories found. Showing results 671 to 680.
Cleveland Street.
I used to live across the main road from the tunnel, on Cleveland Street, next to the Seamans Mission. That road looked hundreds of yards wide, and I used to sit near the entrance on a wall, watching the cars going into and ...Read more
A memory of Birkenhead in 1963 by
Gatehouse
As a child I spent many happy holidays in Denton. My Grandparents lived in the right-hand side of the gatehouse; their names were James and Jane Howell. He was a gardener at the Hall. I remember at the age of about five years old, rushing ...Read more
A memory of Denton in 1930 by
The Thirties
My grandmother, widowed, lived during the 20s and 30s at 1, High Street (next to The Dolphin), and was glad of family visits to assist in her invalid-style of life. That usually meant our family, and my mother took a number ...Read more
A memory of Middleton Stoney in 1930 by
Childhood In The Village
I moved to Hatfield Peverel in late 1941, after my family was bombed out in London. My father took the Duke of Wellington pub over, where we lived until 1949. Yes they were good years in the village, but at the ...Read more
A memory of Hatfield Peverel in 1942 by
My Grandmother
My grandmother was born in Tring in the late 1800s and was married in Tring Church on Christmas Day in 1909. Her grandfather was a very peculiar character and had to be taken to the village pump for his weekly wash and he used to sit ...Read more
A memory of Tring in 1900 by
Childhood
As a boy I thought my hometown of Frizington to be a wonderful place. We played football for hours on the Ball Alley or on the square. (Trafalgar Square) Also hours of fun "up the backs" The houses behind Nook St playing marbles. ...Read more
A memory of Frizington by
Living In Cefn Hengoed
The Kemp family lived in Cefn Hengoed from about 1920 to 1938, I was born there in my grand parents James and Rose Kemp’s house, No.64 Gelligaer Road in 1934. My memories of the village start from about 1937 I remember ...Read more
A memory of Cefn Hengoed in 1930 by
Evacuation
At the beginning of the war I was evacuated to Leek. I was only there until the Christmas but I remember going to school in a building called the Nicholson Institute and I stayed with some lovely people called Wagstaffe near Balls End ...Read more
A memory of Leek in 1930 by
Student Balls
While I was at University all the balls were held in this wonderful hall, and seeing it in this picture certainly brings back pleasant memories. Somewhere I still have my ball cards. Underneath it was a crypt, or undercroft, where the student societies held some of their meetings.
A memory of Durham in 1956 by
Growing Up In The 1960's
We lived in Headon's Cottage, Fairy Cross - it had been an old German doctor's cottage in the 1700s, a Doctor Wacerill who is buried in St. Andrew's churchyard, and his faded plaque was still above the front door - walls ...Read more
A memory of Alwington by
Captions
1,668 captions found. Showing results 1,609 to 1,632.
A large manor house was built within the remains of the old castle in 1541, incorporating some of the original curtain wall, the gatehouse and the great tower.
curtain); Haverfordwest (some demolition); Monmouth (dismantle works); Montgomery (demolish, material to be sold for paying costs); Newcastle Emlyn (negotia- tions with owner for assurances it will
The Inner Keep is on the right, with holes knocked into its 9ft-thick walls.
main fabric of the present building is known to date from the 16th century, there is internal evidence in the roof beams and fireplaces, and in the large use of timber on one of the external walls
By 1841 35,000 people called Carlisle home and many of these were weavers, drawn to live close to the spinning mills that supplied them with thread and bought their woven cloth for finishing.
To the east of the town are similar marshes at the King's Pool, off North Walls.
To the east of the town are similar marshes at the King's Pool, off North Walls.
Of course, however improved the transport links continue to become, Carlisle will always appear to be somewhat isolated and is unlikely to ever grow to be a great metropolis.
Rapid expansion meant that jerry-building was inevitable (it is thought that the term may derive from the poorly built walls of biblical Jericho, which were so easily knocked down by Joshua's army
With the money raised by these taxes, the townsfolk should maintain the walls of the town and build a pier to defend the harbour, and it is thought that Tenby had the earliest pier in Wales.
The workers in Miltall's and Palmer's factory reported supernatural activities such as desk lamps rising in the air, tools mysteriously transported from place to place, and an ethereal figure walking
A tall, marble-paved concourse runs behind a sheer glass wall that looks out onto the entrance square.
(The stone he threw still lies within the walls of Lincoln Castle). Havelock gains the reputation of being the strongest man in England.
Petersfield had adopted the village to help with its reconstruction, and a letter thanking the town for gifts of parcels of clothing and coloured wall maps to brighten the schoolroom was signed
Bowden made them for Tom Walls, and for Geoff Lewis when he won the 1971 Derby on Mill Reef. These silks are supplied direct to the owner, not the jockey.
In the centre of this picture is the Time Ball Tower, used for supplying the correct time to the anchored vessels.
There was once a pub in this area which was called the Ball which may be where the name Ball o' Ditton comes from.
On the left is the Grand Clothing Hall, a well-loved outfitters, built in 1906. A market cross was here in 1707, but it was demolished 160 years later.
Modern golfers benefit from the latest technology: an aerodynamic ball, and well-balanced clubs made from a precise blend of metals.
This was closed as a livestock market in the early 1960s and has been replaced by the new Saint Martin's Walk with shops.
Ransomes & Marles brought jobs to the town when they opened a ball-bearing plant.
With deck chairs, buckets, spades and ball, everything is set for an ideal day at the seaside.
In this quintessentially English scene, one can almost hear the sound of bat hitting ball, followed by the ripple of applause from the knowledgeable spectators.
A schoolboy's attention has been caught, perhaps by the girl running after her ball in front of the Kingsbury Arms Hotel.
Places (25)
Photos (515)
Memories (1986)
Books (0)
Maps (172)