Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Lancaster, Lancashire
 - Preston, Lancashire
 - Ormskirk, Lancashire
 - Blackpool, Lancashire
 - Heysham, Lancashire
 - Fleetwood, Lancashire
 - Blackburn, Lancashire
 - Clitheroe, Lancashire
 - Burnley, Lancashire
 - Morecambe, Lancashire
 - Accrington, Lancashire
 - Nelson, Lancashire
 - Earby, Lancashire
 - Chorley, Lancashire
 - Carnforth, Lancashire
 - Darwen, Lancashire
 - Longridge, Lancashire
 - Barnoldswick, Lancashire
 - Thornton, Lancashire
 - Colne, Lancashire
 - Bacup, Lancashire
 - Freckleton, Lancashire
 - Cleveleys, Lancashire
 - Poulton-Le-Fylde, Lancashire
 - Adlington, Lancashire
 - Fulwood, Lancashire
 - Whitworth, Lancashire
 - Haslingden, Lancashire
 - Clayton-Le-Moors, Lancashire
 - Barrowford, Lancashire
 - Skelmersdale, Lancashire
 - Bamber Bridge, Lancashire
 - Great Harwood, Lancashire
 - Padiham, Lancashire
 - Church, Lancashire
 - Kirkham, Lancashire
 
Photos
6,501 photos found. Showing results 121 to 140.
Maps
3,155 maps found.
Books
22 books found. Showing results 145 to 22.
Memories
133 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.
Greengates Was The Place To Live
I was born in and brought up in Greengates in 1949 at Redcar Road. I have many great memories of happy times. I went to Undercliff Girls School. I remember the picture house very well and used to go to the matinee ...Read more
A memory of Greengates in 1949 by
James Halstead Nutter
James Halstead Nutter was a Headmaster of Cockfield School, in the early 20thC, certainly after WW1. He was my Grandmother's cousin. I wonder if anyone alive today has any memories of him. If so, I would love to hear from ...Read more
A memory of Hamsterley in 1930 by
The Best Market In Lancashire
Bury market was famous and its modern version, though not as interesting, still is. We used to go to the market and buy one of Thompson's black puddings, piping hot in a grease-proof paper, The man would split it and put ...Read more
A memory of Bury in 1940 by
The Pellys Of Nether Compton
In August 2006 my daughter and I visited Nether Compton in a Trace Your Ancestors search. My father, the son of an Eliza Pelly here in Lancashire, always told the tale of two brothers, Charles and Henry Pelly, who ...Read more
A memory of Nether Compton by
Happy Horsey Holidays
I have the fondest memories of childhood holidays spent in Ennerdale and a deep and lasting love of the valley, brought about not only by the remote beauty but also the many, very happy times that I have spent there with ...Read more
A memory of Ennerdale Bridge in 1975 by
Childhood Memories At Grandma Robinsons
Funny how some things stay with you all your life, and even when you leave a country you have grown up in, those memories follow you. It was the end of WW2, people were beginning to settle, 'ration books' ...Read more
A memory of Stalybridge by
Alamein Barracks At Huyton
I had never even heard of Huyton, much less been there until I joined the Territorial Army in 1967. I had enlisted at a recruiting office in Manchester and attended the Alamein Barracks for my basic training in 1967. In ...Read more
A memory of Huyton in 1967 by
Days Out In Lytham In The Forties And Fifties
We lived in Preston, Lancashire from 1944 to 1956 and often came here for the day on the bus. My mother preferred Lytham to Blackpool and we spent happy hours on the sands. This picture, taken before the ...Read more
A memory of Lytham by
My Mother Veronica Kenny Vera Preston Lancashire
My mom had a best friend, her name was Marie, who married Bill and my mother was their maid of honour. My family in Scotland still have the picture of the wedding day with Bill in his army uniform. I ...Read more
A memory of Preston in 1940 by
Quest For My Ain Folk
I visited St Peter's in August 1976 as part of a search for traces of my ancestors, the De Vauxs of Adlington, French Hugenots who first settled from France, in 1630. They became Yeomen farmers on the Leghs Adlington estate and ...Read more
A memory of Prestbury in 1976 by
Captions
171 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.
Runcorn was also a coal port, handling traffic from Lancashire and Staffordshire pits.
He held directorships with the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway, the Manchester & County Bank, and the Thames & Mersey Insurance Co, but is remembered for his active role in winning shorter factory working
New sections of waterway were linked to the River Mersey to enable ocean-going vessels to reach the new inland port of Manchester and the neighbouring Lancashire cotton towns.
Townley Hall really is a gem in the history of Lancashire. Some council-run great houses have an air of poverty about them; but not so Townley.
Lindale is close to the River Winster, the old Lancashire and Westmorland border. John Wilkinson, the ironmaster, is buried in the churchyard in an unmarked grave; it was his fifth burial.
Many refer to this village as the most perfect in Lancashire, with its village green next to the church, and old inn.
Rising on Lamb Hill Fell, the river now runs into the Stock Reservoir and then resumes its wandering in North Lancashire.
The building has been added to and rebuilt, and is now part of the University of Central Lancashire.
Belthorn was one of the last villages in Lancashire to honour Collop Monday, and Poulton-le-Fylde was the last to answer the call of the Pancake Bell.
In 1844, railway surveyors came to this agricultural village with the aim of linking two main lines to provide a route from West Yorkshire to Lancashire and Cumbria.
This is a wonderfully patriotic photograph of the monument to Lancashire lad Sir Robert Peel, standing in the park named after him.
Amongst the companies operating services to Belfast were the IOMSPCo, the Barrow Steam Navigation Co, controlled by the Midland Railway with sailings from Barrow and Morecambe, and a joint Lancashire
Road, river and rail run within twenty yards of Thrutch (a dialect Lancashire word synonymous with great effort).
In this huge hall, cotton merchants from all over Lancashire did their bartering, and many a fortune was made or lost.
Now very much part of Lancashire, the village of Slaidburn was in Yorkshire at the time of our photograph.
There were many Lancashire towns going through the same revitalisation, but in the frenzy of change many of the grand Victorian buildings were lost.
The latest adornment to Lowther Gardens is a statue of a Lytham shrimper sculpted by Colin Spoforth, a Lancashire man.
It was built soon after the American Civil War - at that time the industry prospered, since Lancashire was starved of cotton.
Her restoration transformed the grounds into one of Lancashire's best gardens, and she also became Mayor of the City of Lancaster in 1938. In August 1961 she died, quite suddenly.
The relics of St Cuthbert are alleged to have rested in twelve places, in what is now Lancashire, during the 9th century.
Many refer to this village as the most perfect in Lancashire; with its village green next to the church, and an old inn across the road, it is just how we all imagine an old English village ought to look
To the right is the site of the Lancashire and Yorkshire line Market Place railway station, which was here from 1867 to 1930.
In 1792, a company was formed by Lancaster merchants; they saw a canal as a way of getting cheap coal from Wigan and getting other goods out to the towns in the heart of Lancashire, and to the growing
OPENED in 1904, Caldecott Park was designed by Mr Edward Thomas of Aughton, Lancashire, who won £20 for his plan (a triangular park with a large clump of trees in the centre) in a newspaper competition
Places (760)
Photos (6501)
Memories (133)
Books (22)
Maps (3155)

