Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Places
31 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Combe Martin, Devon
- Castle Combe, Wiltshire
- Combe Down, Avon
- Milton Combe, Devon
- Combe St Nicholas, Somerset
- Monkton Combe, Avon
- Burrington Combe, Avon
- Combs, Derbyshire
- Combe Raleigh, Devon
- Combe, Sussex
- Combe, Oxfordshire
- Combe, Berkshire
- Combs, Yorkshire
- Combs, Suffolk
- Combe, Hereford & Worcester
- Combe, Devon (near Blackpool)
- Combe, Devon (near Salcombe)
- Combe, Devon (near Buckfastleigh)
- Combe, Somerset (near Somerton)
- Combe Almer, Dorset
- Combe Fishacre, Devon
- Combe Florey, Somerset
- Combe Hay, Avon
- Combe Common, Surrey
- Combe Pafford, Devon
- Combe Throop, Somerset
- East Combe, Somerset
- Combs Ford, Suffolk
- Abbas Combe, Somerset
- St Combs, Grampian
- Combe Moor, Hereford & Worcester
Photos
705 photos found. Showing results 141 to 160.
Maps
161 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,241 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.
Greenford Gardens
We moved to 1 Greenford Gardens in 1936 from Northolt; it was a great place to grow up. Spent most of the time in Ravenor Park playing football/cricket, went to Bethams then Costons Junior with Mr Blount the Headmaster who ...Read more
A memory of Greenford in 1940 by
Request For Info
This is not a memory - more of a request for info/stories please. I used to live in Barkingside in the 1990's when I was a child. I have since moved away but I am still very interested in the history of the area, especially ...Read more
A memory of Ilford in 1940 by
Ware Swimming Pool
I spent great times as a boy in the swimming pool which always showed the water temperature on a board outside the entrance ( sometimes 50F ). Our favourite activity was doing bombs off the top board and soaking anyone who was near ...Read more
A memory of Ware in 1955 by
Air Raids
These memories are as fresh in my mind as if they happened last week. Boston had its share of air raids, the first one was on a rainy Monday, it was July, the first day of our summer school holidays. It would be about 7.15 am when we ...Read more
A memory of Boston in 1940 by
Early 1950s
I was born in Dartord where I lived in Stanham Road until I moved at the age of 9 years. Childhood friends I remember are Anthony Artist, Janet Cork, Michael Burville (not sure of spelling of surname). My next door neighbour was the ...Read more
A memory of Dartford in 1953 by
My Memories Of Selly Oak And Bournbrook
I was born Anne Shirley Crofts back of 622 Bristol Road (opposite where Aldi is now) in July 1944, brother Ronnie was born 1940, sister Vivienne was born 1942, and Alan was born 1947, between Riverton Road ...Read more
A memory of Selly Oak in 1954 by
Evacuation During The Second World War
During the early years of the Second World War my father was posted to the Royal Artillery camp in Almondbury and when we were bombed in our home in Hull he found a small house for my mother, sisiter and I ...Read more
A memory of Kirkheaton in 1940 by
Merrion House School During Ww 2
I think it was 1944 when I visited my brother Brian at the boys school known as Merrion House, run by Mr. and Mrs. Brummell-Hicks under a spartan but friendly and encouraging regime. Doodlebugs(V1's) aimed at ...Read more
A memory of Sedlescombe in 1943 by
I Lived Opposite When Fort House Was Bombed
I remember seeing the house before and after the bomb struck. The front of the house was demolished leaving just the front of the ground and first floor hanging there. At the time I lived opposite and the upper floors of our home collapsed as well.
A memory of Gravesend in 1945 by
Boyhood Memories
I was born in 89 Abbot Street, just off Sunderland Road, in 1932, then we moved to the Gateshead end of Redheugh Bridge. When the Second World War started we moved to 20 Brussel Street. The Davidson family lived in the flat ...Read more
A memory of Gateshead in 1940 by
Captions
232 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.
The village lost its medieval church to bombs in World War II and has expanded much since the War, partly due to Lincoln's proximity and partly to the RAF.
The medieval church was destroyed by bombs in World War II intended for Lincoln or the RAF base, but in this view we look north past the Horse and Jockey pub in a view little changed since 1960.
In 1995 members of the Royal Marine Band died here when the IRA bombed them during a parade.
The Victorian church was gutted in the 1941 blitz when its timber roof was destroyed by the incendiary bombs.
Basingstoke was bombed three times during the Second World War. Will the Austin A40 driver stop and buy some cigarettes from Hankin the tobacconist, the second shop on the left?
Repairs began, but when in 1942 they were almost complete, the hall was bombed and very badly damaged. In the 1950s the hall was rebuilt as near to the original design as possible.
The front of the hall still bears the scars of the night during World War Two when a bomb landed to the side of the War Memorial, destroying a static water tank into the bargain.
The factory was destroyed by bombing in 1940, and under the new bridge is a memorial to R J Mitchell. Until the 1930s flying boats left here for the Channel Islands.
It was damaged by a German bomb in an air raid on 14 May 1941, and demolished later in the Second World War.
During World War II British soldiers camped in the grounds, whilst the house was used by a London-based engineering company whose premises had been bombed.
On the right is the forecourt of the Congregational Church, which was rebuilt in 1955 following its destruction by a German bomb in 1940.
That edifice failed to survive the Second World War, having been wrecked by a V1 flying bomb in July 1944. Its owners then gave the park to the borough council.
During May 1941, Heswall was bombed, the school lost three classrooms and the headmaster's daughter and her fiancé were killed.
Inside is the Oval Hall, where up to 2,800 people can be seated for concerts.The front of the hall still bears the scars of the night during World War Two when a bomb landed to the side of the War
The original Jack Straw's Castle pub was destroyed by bombs during the Second World War; it was rebuilt in the early 1960s by the noted Classical architect Raymond Erith in Georgian Gothick
The road has now been truncated to allow for the building of the Barbican; the church survived severe Second World War bombing to stand in the way of the development, which was completed in the early 1980s
On the night of 14 November 1940, German bombs destroyed the ancient cathedral church of St Michael.
The medieval church was destroyed by bombs in World War II intended for Lincoln or the RAF base, but in this view we look north past the Horse and Jockey pub in a view little changed since 1960.
Tottington's unusual claim to fame is that it is one of the most northerly places to have suffered a hit from a German V1 flying bomb, or Doodlebug, during the Second World War.
Ten thousand buildings were destroyed, and seventy thousand more damaged by the bombing.
Ten thousand buildings were destroyed, and seventy thousand more damaged by the bombing.
The Ferry Inn has had a chequered history, having been bombed on 27 April 1941 when 42 people were killed. After being rebuilt in 1956, disaster again struck with a fire in 1965.
The lane just stops here, but not at the sea –beyond is an RAF bombing range. There are danger signs and red flags all over the place.
To the right are the trees of Thompson Park — it was fortunately among them that Burnley's only Second World War bomb fell.
Places (31)
Photos (705)
Memories (1241)
Books (0)
Maps (161)