Maps

370 maps found.

Books

1 books found. Showing results 1,681 to 1.

Memories

10,342 memories found. Showing results 701 to 710.

Early Memories

I was born in a house at Fidge in September 1948. My Dad was stationed in Orkney during the war.He was a leading Aircraftsman and worked on spitfires and hurricanes. After the war he stayed on a Croft near the aerodrome. My Dad rented the ...Read more

A memory of Fidge by Patricia Mac Cormick

Walker/Fox/Pacey Family History Of Winston, Co. Durham Uk

My Grandmother, Hilda Young nee Parkinson, was born in Barnard Castle. Her Mother, Libbey Parkinson nee Walker, was born in Winston. Libbey's Mum, was Sarah Fox, from Ulverston. Sarah Fox ...Read more

A memory of Winston by Pauline Barker

Grandma's Shop

I was born Nov 5, 1939 at 81 Star Lane, the home of my maternal grandparents, James and Anne Maria Bullock. My mother, Annie Grace Bullock, was the youngest of six children. She married my father, Henry George Hooper, in 1935 at ...Read more

A memory of Canning Town by Derek Hooper

Mrs Marzetties Farm

In 1956/7 I lived with my parents on a farm opposite West End pond. The farmer was a strange lady (in a little boy’s mind) called Mrs Marzetty. I remember she dressed like a man. Her daughter was called Nancy. Mother and ...Read more

A memory of West End by delavarde

1 Station Road

I lived at the address which was the house on the corner of hogmoor Road and Station Road. The house was wood not tin as stated and was painted cream. Corrals coal were the owners and a coal yard was at the rear of the house,. . adjacent on ...Read more

A memory of Bordon by John Watts

Lancing Children's Convalescent Home.

In 1952 or 1953 I was a sickly 5 year old. I had 2 brothers, they were twins and one, unbeknown to me was dying of leukaemia. I was sent on a train with a lady and some other children, for a holiday in Lancing. I had ...Read more

A memory of Lancing

The Children’s Home In Long Hanborough, Oxfordshire 30 Years Of Childcare 1950 1980

Many questions are often posed about the history of the Children’s Home known as Long House in Long Hanborough, Oxfordshire in a local history group which has a ...Read more

A memory of Long Hanborough

Gone For Ever

IN THE 1940s TILL THE 1960s, NUNHEAD WAS FULL OF STREETS OF HOUSES THAT HAD MANAGED TO SURVIVE THE WAR YEARS, EVERYONE KNEW EVERYONE, MOTHERS WOULD CHAT AT THE FRONT GATES OF THEIR HOUSES, THE CHILDREN PLAYED IN THE STREETS WITH NO FEAR OF ...Read more

A memory of Nunhead by Peter Mills

Memories

I was born in 54 Mill Street, Trecynon. As was my sister, our mother and her brothers and sitsters. A little 2 down 2 up, stone cottage. It was on the top of the hill, and we could run down "the trip" as we called it, and play there, ...Read more

A memory of Trecynon in 1947 by Heather Forey

Coronation Day

My mother took short term housekeeping positions and in 1953 we lived in Westbrook House in Westbrook village, looking after Sir Edgar and Lady Ludlow Hewitt. He was a gentleman farmer and I sometimes drove around his land with him in ...Read more

A memory of Bromham in 1953 by Sonia James

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Captions

6,977 captions found. Showing results 1,681 to 1,704.

Caption For St Neots, Brook Street C1955

Next to the Bushel & Strike public house (left), in what was the Bell Yard, stands Ibbett`s blacksmith and engineering workshop`s outside store.

Caption For Stamford, St Paul's Street C1960

The window cleaner is outside a house which has a plaque inscribed 'Joseph and Jane Caldecott 1714', but the house is much older than that.

Caption For Little Sandhurst, 1939

This part of East Berkshire consists almost entirely of 19th-century development; here and there are a few large Victorian houses with huge plate-glass windows and free Renaissance decorations.

Caption For Stratford Upon Avon, Harvard House 1922

The house is situated in the High Street, and was completed in 1596 for Thomas Rogers. Rogers' daughter married Robert Harvard, and it was their son who founded Harvard University.

Caption For Beer, Shepherds Cottage 1922

This marvellous house has survived almost unchanged into our new century, and is one of Beer's oldest buildings.

Caption For Crowthorne, High Street 1925

This part of east Berkshire consists almost entirely of 19th-century development; here and there are a few large Victorian houses with huge plate-glass windows and free Renaissance decorations.

Caption For Newbold Verdon, Main Street C1965

This large village with houses showing mixed building styles centres on the crossroads near St James's Church. Note the air raid siren above the door of the Old Black Swan.

Caption For Norwich, From South East 1896

This view, looking across Lower Close, has changed remarkably little since 1896; it shows how the cathedral dominates its surroundings, towering over the houses of Lower Close.

Caption For Sandringham, The Entrance Lodge 1896

Under this neatly-trimmed ivy and bushes is the entrance lodge to Sandringham House and gardens, which were subsequently opened to the public in the early 1900s.

Caption For Teddington, 14 & 16 Park Road 2005

The village population had grown to just short of 700, and there were now over 100 houses. The way of life had remained basically agricultural.

Caption For Launceston, Newport 1935

Just visible inside the Round House is the broken granite stump of the old Newport Cross, which from 1529 to 1831 was the spot at which Newport's two MPs were declared.

Caption For Stamford, St Paul's Street C1960

The window cleaner is outside a house which has a plaque inscribed 'Joseph and Jane Caldecott 1714', but the house is much older than that.

Caption For Otterton, Village 1906

Originally granted to the monks of St Michel in Normandy, Otterton's priory remained an important religious house until Henry VIII's dissolution of the monasteries.

Caption For Devizes, The Town Hall C1960

This building replaced the old one in Wine Street, which now houses the Cheltenham and Gloucester Building Society and Wine Street Gallery upstairs.

Caption For Taunton, Cheapside C1950

A great deal of older residential housing was demolished in Victorian times to make way for Cheapside.

Caption For Ludham, The Village 1931

The thatched house north of the crossroads no longer has a village shop. The outbuilding on the right is now The Cat's Whiskers, a hairdresser's whose name wittily puns on the road name.

Caption For Rochford, The Hall C1955

This substantial building now houses the Rochford Hundred Golf Club. Ann Boleyn had links with this ancient town.

Caption For Warwick, St Mary's Church 1892

The choir, the chapter house and the Beauchamp Chapel escaped destruction, and by 1704 a new nave and a Gothic tower had been built.

Caption For Hilton, The Church C1955

Next to Hilton's lovely church is the village green, landscaped by Capability Brown, and surrounded by houses dating back to Tudor times. Hilton sports a turf-cut maze as its most unusual feature.

Caption For Port Gaverne, The Cove 1906

Note the recent cliff top housing developments on the outskirts of neighbouring Port Isaac.

Caption For Newbury, Northbrook Street C1965

This general view of Northbrook Street shows the gable end to the left of the shop front, above which is a clock, which is all that remains of cloth-maker John Smallwood's house.

Caption For Dublin, Chief Secretary's Lodge, Phoenix Park 1897

This elegant Georgian house, enlarged in 1775 and later modified, is now 'Deerfield', home of the American Ambassador.

Caption For Aldeburgh, Parade 1909

On the right is a lookout tower and boat house for one of Aldeburgh's two lifeboats. The other is just to its left in the distance.

Caption For Salisbury, The Close 1906

This attractive view of the Close looks westwards towards Choristers Green.The original campanile (Bell Tower) was behind the house on the left of the picture, and was removed in 1789.