Places

5 places found.

Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Maps

18 maps found.

Books

13 books found. Showing results 1,681 to 13.

Memories

4,612 memories found. Showing results 701 to 710.

1972

Married at the wonderful old church of St. Peter's Walton on the Hill, 5th July 1972. At this time, my parents were living at Tudor Court, Walton St. Walton on the Hill, and Mum, owned the shop below, Anne Cleeves. I had been over ...Read more

A memory of Walton on the Hill in 1972 by Adele Pentony Graham

My Childhood Years In Stebbing

My Grandparents, Harry and Hannah Young lived in the first cottage on the left as you enter the village. I spent most of my school holidays there with them and my Mother and I were evacuated to live with them during ...Read more

A memory of Stebbing in 1940 by Vera Webster

My Mum's Hairdressing Salon

Right on the end of this barn, hidden from view was a small irregular building with it's own door. It had been a small butchers shop some time before my Mum and Dad bought it as a hairdressing salon for my mum ...Read more

A memory of Bolton-by-Bowland in 1977 by Gail Armstrong

The Cottages

The cottage nearest to the telegraph pole was my grandmother's.  My uncles Ted and Bob lived there with her until they moved to Woodbine Farm,  Langtoft.  After they left, gran moved in with my family at the other end of the ...Read more

A memory of Gristhorpe in 1950 by Polly Reynolds

Station Road Meopham

My parents moved into Station Rd in 1963, as a newly married couple. There was a terrace of new houses built in Station Rd in 1962/63 & theirs was the furthest house down the road, the end of the terrace, I think No.28? I ...Read more

A memory of Meopham in 1963 by Tracey Acton

Wartime Memories

I well remember living in the village  from 1940 to 1944 being evacuated there as a 6 year old from the East End of London. I lived very close to the war memorial and attended school set up for evacuees in the cricket pavilion ...Read more

A memory of Warborough in 1940 by Peter Grimble

A Long Time Ago

In memory land way back in the mists of time, two small boys left these shores and sailed away across the seas to New Zealand, the land of the All Blacks rugby team.  They left behind many fond memories and have never really ...Read more

A memory of Halesworth in 1947

Willow Garth

My Grandparents Arthur and Gladys Gossop lived at Willow Garth, opposite the White Horse Pub.  Grandad bought it with his Army money.  He built a workshop, and began a business which included Wheelwright, Joiner and Contractor.  He ...Read more

A memory of Gilberdyke in 1960 by Julia Cormack

Berkeley Ave

I lived in Cranford in the late 60's early 70's. It was a great place to live. We moved into our grandparents house. I loved the old village style buildings near the Berkeley Arms and was sad to see a new hotel in its place. There ...Read more

A memory of Cranford in 1965 by Pauline Williams

Wartime Evacuee

I was evacuated from Dagenham during the war with my sisters Joyce and Pat. They lived with the schoolmaster Mr Pearce, whilst I lived with Mr & Mrs Norris Tinylogs, Lily Lane. I remember working with Mr Frank Hazzard during ...Read more

A memory of Templecombe in 1940 by John Evans

Captions

5,016 captions found. Showing results 1,681 to 1,704.

Caption For Danby, The Green C1960

Sheep safely graze on the village green in Danby, a pretty village on the northern edge of the North York Moors. Note the chapel on the left.

Caption For Preston Candover, Canterton Stores C1960

In the days when supermarkets were uncommon, Canterton Stores would have provided villagers with almost everything they required. In the middle of Preston Candover is the Victorian church, St Mary's.

Caption For Oakwood Hill, Village 1906

Well off the beaten track and close to the West Sussex border, this village is now more commonly known as Oakwoodhill. It has a delightful old church standing on its own in woodland.

Caption For Wallasey, May Cottage And The Nook 1898

The coalman pauses between his deliveries. Village life carried on much as it always had done, even though not many miles away the industrial revolution was in full swing.

Caption For Chirbury, The Village C1955

Chirbury was the home of Lord Herbert, an Elizabethan philosopher, diplomat and keen historian.

Caption For Clun, The Bridge C1960

Chirbury was the home of Lord Herbert, an Elizabethan philosopher, diplomat and keen historian.

Caption For Hawkshead, And Wetherlam 1929

Beyond the village rises Wetherlam, the most northerly of the Coniston Fells, and over to the left, hidden by cloud, Lancashire's highest peak, the Old Man.

Caption For Winterton On Sea, The Beach Road C1955

The unmade road leads from the village to the beach. The sand-dunes are covered with marram grass, which helps knit them together and prevent erosion on this windy coast.

Caption For Woburn, High Street 1952

Now one of the busiest road junctions in the rural region, in 1952 the centre of Woburn was a study in tranquillity.

Caption For Cragg Vale, General View C1955

Cragg Vale, seen here from above the village, was a remote hamlet above the Calder Valley in the 18th century, when it was the base of a notorious gang of counterfeiters known as the 'Cragg Vale Coiners

Caption For Armitage, New Road C1955

This view of the village's main road was taken looking east. It had long since replaced the Old Road which branched off left behind the photographer and forded the river at one point.

Caption For Medstead, Post Office C1955

The village shop and post office are featured prominently in this picture.

Caption For Cheam, The Broadway C1950

In their summer dresses, the ladies of Cheam go about their task of shopping along Cheam Broadway at lunchtime on a warm day.

Caption For Bloxham, The Cross And Post Office C1955

The 200ft 14th-century steeple of St Mary's Church is a prominent landmark. There is a stone carving of the Last Judgement above the west door.

Caption For Barford St John, The Village C1965

This is the countryside at its best! Barford St John is a typical example of the remoteness of some of the villages in north-west Oxfordshire.

Caption For Buckden, Ivy Cottage C1965

Buckden is beautifully situated under Buckden Pike, which soars to 2,302 feet above the village and provides a fine viewpoint across Wharfedale.

Caption For Downham, The Village 1921

This posed picture shows the lower part of the village.The 15th-century tower of the village church is peeping out on the skyline on the left.

Caption For Little Sutton, Chester Road 1966

The village straddles the main A41 Chester Road with the main shopping area spread out in a linear fashion on either side of the road, as we can see here.

Caption For Exmouth, The Sands 1890

At the beginning of the last millennium, marauding Danes landed on these sandy Devon beaches and put the village of Exmouth to fire and sword.

Caption For Botley, The Square 1957

This photograph shows the Dolphin Hotel on the left of the Square, next to the mid-19th-century Market Hall.

Caption For Wiswell, Village 1906

The view looks along the lane towards a 19th-century school and to the left, down Vicarage Fold, stands the village pub.

Caption For Horam, The Village C1960

This sprawling modern village grew up with the coming of the railway at the junction of the A267 and B2203.

Caption For Ewyas Harold, The Village C1955

In the days before almost everyone owned a car, quiet villages situated miles from the nearest town needed village shops able to supply all the essentials.

Caption For Stotfold, High Street 1959

The village is set solidly in the heart of market gardening country, and Stotfold's name is a carry forward of the Old English title for a pigpen.