Places
7 places found.
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Photos
79 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
40 maps found.
Books
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Memories
71 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Childhood Memories Of Yapton
i have very fond memories of visiting my grand parents in yapton, who lived opposite the church in the cottages.my grandfather Roy, i believe was the villiage carpenter and my nan alice was helper in the church, and also ...Read more
A memory of Yapton in 1972 by
Old Northfield
The stretch of road we see is called Bell Lane. Bell Lane curves back to Bristol Rd. The big house partly seen in the distance is Bell House which has quite a history.To it's left goes Bell Holloway (still fairly unaltered) and to ...Read more
A memory of Northfield in 1930 by
Roan Boy Finally Gets To Braithwaite
All through the lower forms at the Roan School in Blackheath, London SE3, I was aware of the existence of Braithwaite Camp. It had been started in 1930 by a former headmaster of the school, Mr Arthur Hope, on ...Read more
A memory of Braithwaite by
The Anchor Inn
I spent a lot of my social time at the Anchor. Does anyone recal when the dart boards were made of wood and the landlord would leave them to soak in the river opposite. It somehow seemed so much deeper then. The landlord and his ...Read more
A memory of Bishopstoke in 1965 by
The Time Bomb On Bell Vue Terrace
I can add information about the September bombing and suggest that one reason for the low number of casualities was that it was a time bomb that landed on Bell Vue Terrace. Aunt Alice and Daisy lived at ...Read more
A memory of Hendon in 1940 by
Playing Out At The Court.
As a child, from the age of six until the age of fourteen, I used to live in Manston Street, off Mary Street in an area called Strangeways. My two older brothers were mad on speedway racing and used to visit Belle Vue to ...Read more
A memory of Manchester in 1960 by
Jtbells
This is the year I started on the building sites in 1963, I got a job on J. T. Bell's site in Whickam, the site hadn't been running long then as it was in the first stage. All the lads were mainly from Newburn, Lemington, and Throckley. If ...Read more
A memory of Newburn in 1963 by
Where I Was Born
My Beginning, at Sole Street near Cobham Kent. (9th March 1946 - 2nd January 1951) I was born on Saturday March 9th 1946 at 3.29pm at Temperley, The Street, Sole Street, Kent. I was delivered at home by the ...Read more
A memory of Sole Street in 1946
Triangle Row
We moved in to number 13 after we got married. Our first visitor was unfortunately a policeman with a warrant for the previous owners arrest. I'm sure we were not alone in the house. We often used to hear an over the door type bell ...Read more
A memory of Norland Town in 1984 by
Plympton Station Holiday Memories
My grandparents, my mother's parents, lived in Vicarage Road, Plympton until 1962 when they moved to Moorland Avenue. As children we always spent our holidays with them and I have early memories of accompanying my ...Read more
A memory of Plympton in 1958 by
Captions
18 captions found. Showing results 1 to 18.
The bright sunlight glares off the stucco of the Belle Vue hotel and the Queen's Hotel beyond.
The Belle Vue tea gardens, on the right, were built in 1790 and were very popular.They were visited in 1830 by the future Queen Victoria, who had tea there with her mother.
A further view of the Working Men's Convalescent Home, showing the sunken gardens, laid out on the dry bed of the former lagoon of the Belle Vue Hotel, which can be seen in the centre of the
The two boys are posing at the south end of Highbridge Road near the junction with Belle Vue Road.
Behind on the left is a house called Belle Vue, later Whitcliffe Grange, now demolished and replaced by council houses. Beyond is Westfields, one of the town's three medieval open fields.
The main hotel at Pegwell Bay was The Belle Vue, run by William Shaw.
All the buildings in this view survive, including the smaller houses in Elms Avenue and the rather good 1850s stucco of the Belle Vue Hotel, with its arched ground floor windows and heavy moulded cornice
The Belle Vue tea gardens, on the right, were built in 1790 and were very popular.They were visited in 1830 by the future Queen Victoria, who had tea there with her mother.
Roses twine around the doorway of the cottage on the right in this 50s photograph of Tideswell's Market Square, with the Belle Vue Hotel (now gone) in the centre background.
Once the home of a bandstand and a small zoo boasting peacocks and monkeys, Belle Vue was also the site for the 1897 Welsh National Eisteddfod.
Behind on the left is a house called Belle Vue, later Whitcliffe Grange, now demolished and replaced by council houses. Beyond is Westfields, one of the town's three medieval open fields.
A Georgian house called Belle Vue was built at the foot of Newton Road in the 1780s.
To the right of this charming view is the entrance to the Belle Vue Tea Gardens, patronized by the young Princess Victoria when she visited her mother in 1830.
On the same day, they lunched at Belle Vue before opening the new Infirmary building in Free School Lane.
On the right is the old Belle Vue Tavern dating back to the 1760s, which was an earlier haunt for smugglers.
Port Erin's increasing popularity with holidaymakers led to a number of hotels being opened, including the Falcon's Nest, the Eagle, the Bellevue, and the Bay.
The Bellevue Hotel at Pegwell is pictured here in its clifftop setting.The structure that is visible on the left was an artificial lagoon offering visitors sea-water bathing in safe, sheltered
As a result of the expansion of the town since 1959 due to London overspill, much of the center was redeveloped.