Places
6 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
Sorry, no photos were found that related to your search.
Maps
360 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
141 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Wonderful Years
Living on the island was like living in paradise - it seemed like a constant holiday! I remember walking from 'Danehurst' along Pitts Lane across Binstead Road and up Cemetary Road to school every day. I loved walking to the beach ...Read more
A memory of Binstead in 1955 by
The Police Station & Cinema Advertisements
The memory from 1948 reminded me of my first and ALMOST ONLY experience of a cell. My parents were friends of Cliff Hayward of Bolton on Dearne and his family. Cliff was a Police constable on the ...Read more
A memory of Goldthorpe by
Pear Tree Farm
My dads family the "Boltons" lived on a farm called Pear Tree Farm. I thought from memory they owned it but now after research I think they just lived there as workers? I remember walking down a country lane not far from there and ...Read more
A memory of Herne Bay in 1960 by
The School House
My great great grandfather Matthew Stannett was an elementary teacher along with his wife Sarah Bush Bolton (Stannett). They lived in the school house in 1881 with their five children. Has anyone got a photo of the house or know of the Stannett family?
A memory of Thrapston by
Hartford Secondary Modern School
Me and my late twin brother started at this school in 1953, the school was mixed. We were the first ones to be there, it was a brand new school. Fred Beech was the headmaster, he was a grand man and would always ...Read more
A memory of Northwich in 1953 by
Cheadle In The Second World War
I think that we must have moved to Cheadle around 1938, because I was born in Newcastle under Lyme, but my younger sister was born in Cheadle in 1939. At that time we lived on Leek Road. We had various ...Read more
A memory of Cheadle in 1930 by
258 Furlong Road
I was born at 258 Furlong Road in 1944. I lived there with my mum and gran for 5 years till we moved over to Purston Featherstone in 1950. My gran was called Elsie Nowell, the years we spent there were wonderful...I always ...Read more
A memory of Bolton Upon Dearne in 1944 by
Happy Youth
I first found out about when I moved to Great Horton in Bradford about 1952. I met a boy called Philip Tempest who lived in a house near by, we became life long friends. His parent took me on holiday with them to a cottage they owned in ...Read more
A memory of Nesfield in 1950 by
Evacuation
I lived in Brook Bungalow between Latchingdon and Althorne during the war years and visited grandparents there into the 50's. I remember Barbie and Alec, the Mathams and the Plumbs (who ran the local garage) with such affection and ...Read more
A memory of Latchingdon in 1940 by
My Oldham
I was born in Oldham in 1946. Lived in Norfolk Street, Chadderton until 1953 then moved to the Isle of Wight. My mother, Marjorie Bolton, lived in Hollinwood and represented Oldham as Cotton Queen in the 1930's. Have always loved the ...Read more
A memory of Oldham in 1946 by
Captions
76 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
Here, three fishing boats have their staysails set up to dry, while a small boat on the beach nearest the sea has an early outboard motor.
Both the Town Hall, the stone building on the right, and the Bolton Hotel on the left, are still here today.
The ruins of Bolton Abbey are set alongside a sweeping bend in the River Wharfe. The setting has always been popular with painters, and Turner and Landseer were visitors here.
This cruising converted narrow boat on the Grand Union was photographed a few months before the final northbound commercial operation: early in 1966, Roses Lime Juice sent their final cargo to the wharf
This hotel at Bolton Bridge is less than a mile from Bolton Abbey.
The boat on the left-hand side in front of the man on the jetty is used as a store for lobster pots.
Here we see an almost deserted Queen's Park, with just one customer for a rowing boat on the park's lake.The park opened on 20 June 1887 in Queen Victoria's Jubilee year.
The boat on the left is the Susannah.
The Great Hall at Castle Bolton had been converted to a restaurant for visitors when this photograph was taken. The sign over the massive fireplace (centre) describes the room as the Great Chamber.
The great ruined chancel of Bolton Abbey in Wharfedale is one of the great architectural treasures of the Yorkshire Dales.
Originally built in 1790 for Sir John Legard, Storrs Hall was purchased in 1806 by Col John Bolton, a local philanthropist, who from 1808-11 transformed it into the fine Georgian mansion we
The village of Bolton-le-Sands sits astride the A6, four miles north of Lancaster.
The Bridge Inn is named after Victoria Bridge, built to span a tidal creek that ran across the line of Bolton Road; the bridge thus linked Bolton Road to the New Chester Road (the creek was eventually
Hanging the sails out to dry along the railings are as equal a part of small vessel maintenance as working on the hull note the man by the upturned boat on the left-hand side.
A parasol to be seen on the rearmost boat on the right, together with the voluminous dresses, is a reminder that in Edwardian days ladies still stayed firmly covered up.
The village lies next to Bolton on Swale five miles east of Richmond; it has the largest walled green in the whole of the country.
A boat on a trailer here (left) confirms the ancient links between this community and the sea.
This is probably the longest-lived operational horse-drawn trip boat on the canal system.
Hest was part of Bolton-le-Sands, and was a hamlet near Morecambe Bay. Hest Bank was the seaward side of the village, right at the southern side of the mouth of the River Kent.
Born near Bolton in 1768, he established Preston's first cotton mill, known as the Yellow Factory, and founded a textile business that grew to be one of the biggest in the world.
The steamer 'Swift', launched in 1900 as the then largest boat on the lake, sits at the end of the pier, whilst a cluster of yachts, possibly racing, passes between the boat station and
The two men in the rowing boat on the left-hand side prepare their craft for leaving the quay.
The village was at the private entrance to Bolton Castle, and would have provided this massive stronghold with goods and trades.
Here we see a Humber keel boat on the river. In the background is the great parish church of St George built in 1858 to replace an earlier one which had been destroyed by fire five years earlier.
Places (6)
Photos (0)
Memories (141)
Books (0)
Maps (360)

