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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
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Photos
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Maps
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Memories
404 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
I Lived In Hampstead Norris From 1945 To 1962
I lived in Hampstead Norris as it was known in those days from 1945 to 1962 when I departed for greener pastures(I thought). I have had this longing for a while now to get in touch with people I ...Read more
A memory of Hampstead Norreys in 1960 by
Canter Across The Canal
It must have been around the late 1960s, early 1970s when my sister and I used to ride our ponies down to Avoncliff. We lived a short distance away in Upper Westwood and our mother liked us to ride along the tow path as it ...Read more
A memory of Avoncliff in 1970 by
Friends
It could have been earlier or even later....my memories of a girl called Elaine Potter and us playing tea parties at her house with her dad's homemade apple wine........Yvonne Blackie I think lived in the Rectory.....I think we were ...Read more
A memory of Sutton-in-Craven in 1960 by
Ghosts At The Mill
I lived in the mill from 1978 to 1982 with my parents, brother and sister. I was only five when I left but I have memories of seeing a lady and man both dressed in very old fashioned clothes around the mill pond. and nobody ever saw ...Read more
A memory of Felsted in 1982 by
The Bull
Lots of happy times (and a few hangovers ) in the Bull pub in the early sixties. In the days when the door was in the front, there used to be a small bar to the left with a dart board and pin table with a small hatch/bar where you got ...Read more
A memory of Hornchurch in 1964 by
My Early Years
my memories relate from the very early forties till the early eighties. I was born in Andover in 1937.My mother was a Lambourne and was born in Thruxton in 1903 at Rose cottage which is just to the left of the "George" looking ...Read more
A memory of Thruxton in 1940 by
Great Place
I was born at home, 4 Ripley Avenue, Great Moor, Stockport on Jan. 4, 1937. I have very fond memories of Hazel Grove. At the age of 11, my Mom & Dad and Sister, Janet immigrated to Toronto, Canada. I did not want to leave, I ...Read more
A memory of Hazel Grove in 1945 by
39londonroad
I was born in Hackbridge in 1944. I lived there until 1953 when my grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins put me on a plane on May 2 to join my father who had emigrated to Canada the year before. My mother, who had lived in ...Read more
A memory of Hackbridge in 1944 by
Busk Crescent
Late in 1945 my parents moved to 25 Busk Crescent, in Cove. The house was on top of a hill and overlooked the Farnborough airfield. From the front bedroom you could see aircraft landing on the runway. The house was one of a string of ...Read more
A memory of Cove in 1945 by
Holidays With Grandad
Thank you for showing the photo of Bank Houses, the house on the right was where my grandad lived and I spent a lot of very happy holidays there. His garden was aways full of lovely things to eat and as I lived in an industrial ...Read more
A memory of Somersham in 1954 by
Captions
54 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
There is some 15th-century stained glass acquired second-hand from Bacton, Herefordshire.
Bacton is now also the place where gas from the Norfolk Sea fields is brought ashore.
Bacton was an important village in medieval Norfolk, because its monastery (at Bromholme) was one of the most-visited places of pilgrimage in England: it possessed a section of the True Cross, a very holy
Up to the Second World War, Bacton remained a sleepy fishing hamlet.
We now leave the old tithing of Eastley and come over the London to Southampton railway line into Barton.
Our brief foray into parkland is over and we reach Earls Barton, some six miles east of Northampton.
The pretty little village of Barton Mills, and the Bull Inn. In the 13th century, the local retor, Jacobus de Scabellis, became a cardinal, and ultimately, Pope Honorius IV.
Geologically the cliffs at Barton-on-Sea are very colourful, not unlike those across the Solent on the Isle of Wight. The area around is rich hunting territory for the collector of fossils.
The present house, seen here, goes back only to 1845. The original family home burnt down in a fierce blaze on Christmas Day 1845.
After the Second World War, old cars came back on the road and new production increased. The edge of the river was soon marked out for free parking. Note the hut spanning the mill race.
Little remains of the original building; this neo-gothic gatehouse dates back only to the 1790s. It is the only part of the Abbey visible to the public.
Little remains of the original building; this neo-gothic gatehouse dates back only to the 1790s. It is the only part of the Abbey visible to the public.
10th-century Anglo-Saxon church tower at Earls Barton.
Note too the bicycle parked on the other side of the road, with the pedal set back on the kerb so it can act as a stand.
Those pictured back on to what is now a miniature golf course and car park.
Note too the bicycle parked on the other side of the road, with the pedal set back on the kerb so it can act as a stand.
On the right is South Parade; the notice above directs us to Sheppards Barton Chapel.
The Raleigh family home, Hayes Barton, can still be seen in all its Elizabethan splendour a mile from the village. There are reminders of the Raleigh family in St Michael's parish church.
The Raleigh family home, Hayes Barton, can still be seen in all its Elizabethan splendour a mile from the village. There are reminders of the Raleigh family in St Michael's parish church.
In medieval times this area was known as Barton Cross.
In 1949 the market was moved to Red Lion Street, but it is now back on two sides of the Green - Market Place and Church Green East.
In 1949 the market was moved to Red Lion Street, but it is now back on two sides of the Green - Market Place and Church Green East.
Barton's, a 17th-century timber-framed building with a Collyweston stone tile roof, is now L'Incontro restaurant.
A little further east along the Essex shore our photographer reaches Tilbury and continues his maritime theme; he firmly turned his back on the remarkable 1670s Tilbury Fort, built by a Dutch engineer
Places (5)
Photos (92)
Memories (404)
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Maps (204)

