Places
2 places found.
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Photos
17 photos found. Showing results 1 to 17.
Maps
45 maps found.
Books
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Memories
55 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Dads First Cattle
My dad had a yard here before the houses were built back in the 40s. He bought his first cows and used to milk them in a barn there. I can remember as a small child being in the barn with mum and dad when an aeroplane crashed ...Read more
A memory of Lower Heyford in 1940 by
Home Memories.
I moved into these cottages with my family in 1935 and my parents were there until 1959. Originally it was a barn hence the name 'Barn Row' and was converted into cottages in 1836 as marked in the brickwork on the other ...Read more
A memory of Paglesham Churchend in 1930 by
Barn Croft.
The house in the middle is where I lived from 1972. The address is 62 Main Street and the house was called Barn Croft. The house on the right was a farm and the house that the middle house was built on was part of the ...Read more
A memory of Cossington
Another Slice Of Life In Burghfield And Sulhampstead
My Grandfather George Thomas Cooper 1880 to 1957 lived at Hebron a Detached Victorian House ( which is opposite what today is Coopers Place, named after my late Father Phillip George ...Read more
A memory of Burghfield Common by
My First School
My dad was from yr Aber. We lived in Pandy Square until my dad died in Feb 1952, he was the fireman on the little train from Towyn to Abergynolwyn, he was also, I believe, a local football referee. He was an ex soldier in the ...Read more
A memory of Abergynolwyn in 1950 by
Birthplace And Never Forgotten When Asked
I was born in Dysart to a mining family of 5 brothers, me being in the middle. My mum watched over us all and used to take us walks by the man in the rock along to Wemyss and back via the castle estate. ...Read more
A memory of Dysart by
Tithby Or Tythby
I used to live in the village of TYTHBY, spelled with a Y and not an I. I did not even know that there was another village close by with a similar name. But I have checked on the computer and there it is, not too far away in the ...Read more
A memory of Tithby in 1944 by
Evacuated To Hele....
I am guessing the year would have been 1944.... I would have been 6 and my brother would have been 5. I dont know how we were evacuated exactly...because we didnt go through the School system, we went with our Mother and our ...Read more
A memory of Hele by
Farnham Royal
I remember walking from home on the britwell estate to school at St Anthony RC Primary or to st Anthony RC church walking past Travis court now a private housing development and past the village hall with Farnham royal men's club ...Read more
A memory of Farnham Royal by
The Hewer Alias Radbourn Of Northleach And Turkdean
Earlier this year I visited Northleach my husband's Ancesters hail from there. His great great Grandfather William Hewer alias Radbourn bought Leygore farm in 1832, a farm of 800 acres according ...Read more
A memory of Northleach by
Captions
16 captions found. Showing results 1 to 16.
Histon is where Mr Chivers started making jam in a barn in 1873.
One of the most picturesque - and most photographed - groups of cottages in the Cotswolds, Arlington Row's first function was as a barn.
To the far right there was a barn, and the bar was situated to the right of the central farmhouse.
The only traffic is a cart parked by a barn on the right of the road, its shafts up in the air (right).
Histon is where Mr Chivers started making jam in a barn in 1873.
The only change to this scene is that the house on the left is now a barn, which is unusual.
A barn, used for meetings by local dissenters, once stood on the site.
The only change to this scene is that the house on the left is now a barn, which is unusual.
The bridge over the tailrace, partly built in hachestone, has rails and posts inscribed 'A Barnes Woodbridge 1901'.
The building survived the Dissolution of 1536 and the clearance of the site in 1779; since then it was used as a barn.
It has a central carriageway and two wings; at the rear they formed an open courtyard with stables and a barn.
One of the most picturesque - and most photographed - rows of cottages in the Cotswolds, Arlington Row's first function was a barn.
In 1826 the medieval nave was drastically altered into a barn-like preaching box.
It is thought that the first proper meeting of Parliament, called by the members themselves rather than at the behest of the King, was held in a barn just next to the castle.
In its original form it was a farm dwelling with a barn and outbuildings, but has been added to and altered down the years.
Catholics started meeting in a barn in 1868, and this church was consecrated in 1884.