Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Brook, Kent
- Brook, Surrey (near Haslemere)
- Timperley Brook, Greater Manchester
- Brook, Surrey (near Guildford)
- Mellor Brook, Lancashire
- Brooke, Norfolk
- Stockton Brook, Staffordshire
- Brook Green, Greater London
- Brook, Isle of Wight
- Brooks, Powys
- Brooks, Cornwall
- Brook, Devon (near Dunsford)
- Brook, Dyfed
- Brooke, Leicestershire
- Brook, Hampshire (near Totton)
- Brook, Hampshire (near Romsey)
- Brook, Devon (near Tavistock)
- Brook Hill, Hampshire
- Brook Street, Essex
- Brooks End, Kent
- Load Brook, Yorkshire
- Ecton Brook, Northamptonshire
- Kingswood Brook, Warwickshire
- Wymans Brook, Gloucestershire
- Clayton Brook, Lancashire
- Brook End, Buckinghamshire
- Brook Hill, Nottinghamshire
- Brook Waters, Wiltshire
- Brooks Green, Sussex
- Brook End, Hertfordshire
- Brook Green, Suffolk
- Quina Brook, Shropshire
- Lower Brook, Hampshire
- Halton Brook, Cheshire
- Holly Brook, Somerset
- Knuzden Brook, Lancashire
Photos
354 photos found. Showing results 121 to 140.
Maps
453 maps found.
Memories
519 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.
Pentalardd Maesycrugiau Our Own Smallholding Neay Llanybydder Nbsp Nbsp
We moved to Pentalardd in Carmarthenshire (near Llanybydder) when I was 15 years old. My parents had sold our home near Addlestone Surrey as we wanted to live on our own ...Read more
A memory of Llanybydder in 1967 by
2 Years In The Village
Sometime around 1956, for about two years, two of us shared a cottage in Iford village (one of the first two as you came off the main road from Lewes). We worked for Mr Robinson milking his Guernsey herd and doing the ...Read more
A memory of Iford in 1956 by
Brook Farm Caravan Site
As a young lad, I enjoyed many happy holidays at Brook Farm Caravan Site in Nansen Road, Holland-on Sea, where my parents owned a caravan. This site was very quiet and superbly unspoilt with nothing but a small shop and ...Read more
A memory of Holland-on-Sea in 1965
Stonehurst Five Ashes
We lived at Stone Cottage, and then Stonehurst on the road between Five Ashes and Jarvis Brook for 7 years whilst I was a child. Wonderful freedom absorbing the Wealden countryside. We used the grocers shop, run by Mr Gagen, ...Read more
A memory of Five Ashes in 1959 by
Derbys Old West End
My father had a scrap-yard in Nuns Street. It was right next to the bridge over Markeaton Brook. I remember always asking to be picked up so I could look over the bridge - I don't know why! Markeaton Brook was filled with old ...Read more
A memory of Derby in 1949
Crichel House During The War Years
Dumpton House (Preparatory) School was evacuated to Crichel during the Second World War from Broadstairs in Kent. My older brother (Paul Cremer) was already at the school and due to the war my parents sent me ...Read more
A memory of Crichel Ho in 1940 by
My Grandfather
My grandfather owned the corner shop in the High Street, it was a sweet shop. He was known as Pop Brooks. Grandad was loved by the villagers. His only son, Harry, my dad, was killed on 20th December 1942. My dad's name was Harry ...Read more
A memory of Lindfield in 1943 by
Sileby My Early Life
I was born in Mountsorrel 1938 and soon moved to Sileby 10, Mountsorrel Lane with my mother Mabel Foukes [nee Burton]. My father Thomas was in the army and my mum worked at Newbold Burton and Lawson Ward. I remember convoys of ...Read more
A memory of Sileby in 1940 by
The Churchyard
I attended St Andrew's school in the 1960s (next to the church), I sang in the church choir when we had school assembly at the church every Wednesday and Mr Brooked played the fabulous organ. We also played in the churchyard too as it was ...Read more
A memory of Hove by
Hawthorn
I had a very happy childhood growing up in Hawthorn until I left at the age of fifteen to join the Royal Navy in 1960. Hawthorn consisted of two distinct halves separated by a 'main road'. The top site had flat roofs while the ...Read more
A memory of Hawthorn by
Captions
253 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.
The Lulle Brook in the view is the third and southernmost channel.
In the 1820s Dobcross possessed two banks (Buckley & Co and Harrop & Co), while Delph supported an agent for the Genuine Tea Co (John Brook), an attorney (Jonas Ainley), and an auctioneer (Timothy Bradbury
The Mill C1960 Izaak Walton fished here in the Meon, reflecting that the valley 'exceeds all England for swift, shallow, clear, pleasant brooks and store of trout'.
Houses in the village today include April Cottage, Brook Cottage, Kiddles, Little Beck, Pound Cottage, Pound House, Trout Cottage and Rowan Cottage.
In the chapter house is the tomb of Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke.
The Brooke Bond van outside is presumably visiting the adjacent grocer`s, Luckin & Sons. This shop still has the family name up, though it currently seems to be full of soft toys.
Below the Sugar Loaf on the western outskirts of Abergavenny stands Nevill Court, previously named The Brooks. It was re-named by William Nevill, Marquess of Abergavenny, when he bought it in 1890.
To the left is Arthur Brook's glass and china shop.
The city council also continued to acquire new parkland through gift and purchase, for example Millhouses Park in 1909, Bingham Park between 1911 and 1927, Graves Park in 1925 and Whirlow Brook
It was at this junction that poet Rupert Brooke stopped his horse-drawn caravan in 1910 to make a speech on Poor Law reform.
Below the Sugar Loaf on the western outskirts of Abergavenny stands Nevill Court, previously named The Brooks.
The hotel grounds are impressive too, with woodland and the large mill pond which the Websters created to increase the power supply of Plants Brook.
Entering the village from Clitheroe, the road dips to cross Heys Brook. Beyond Martin's Bank and the shops is the Black Bull Inn, which carries a date stone of 1855.
As with so many East Devon villages, a tiny stream - the Beer Brook - runs down the main street, first on one side of the road and then on the other.
The setting is very pretty too, with the Downs rising on one side and the Amberley Wild Brooks, a haven for wildlife, on the other.
According to the chronicles of the time, the brook alongside the green ran red with blood.
We are in a marshy area—Amberley Wild Brooks, beside the tidal and navigable River Arun.The castle was a fortified manor of the Bishops of Chichester; it was crenellated c1377 to defend the coastal
Sunnyhurst Wood is a Nature Reserve; Sunnyhurst Brook runs through it to join the River Darwen that gave the town its name.
This point - where Grace's Walk crosses Sandon Brook - has a ghost-story attached to it: Lady Alice Mildmay (d1615), child-bride of Sir Henry, supposedly drowned herself in a pond here after he was unkind
The North Brook runs beneath this historic building and was known to flood.
Mr C H Elkes, a local businessman, offered an eleven-acre field sloping down to the Picknall or Hockley Brook. The recreation ground was opened in 1925.
By the time it was bought by Sir George Samuel Brooke Pechell in 1867, it had become Alton House. The family remained here for about 30 years before moving to Culverton House.
The first two shops in the next building were owned by Arthur Brook, glass and china dealer. Agricultural implements are laid out for sale - it is Saturday, market day.
The name means 'the clearing where the waters meet', the waters being the Calder and the Cragg Brook.
Places (70)
Photos (354)
Memories (519)
Books (707)
Maps (453)