Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Brook, Kent
- Brook, Surrey (near Haslemere)
- Timperley Brook, Greater Manchester
- Brook, Surrey (near Guildford)
- Mellor Brook, Lancashire
- Brooke, Norfolk
- Stockton Brook, Staffordshire
- Brook Green, Greater London
- Brook, Isle of Wight
- Brooks, Powys
- Brooks, Cornwall
- Brook, Devon (near Dunsford)
- Brook, Dyfed
- Brooke, Leicestershire
- Brook, Hampshire (near Totton)
- Brook, Hampshire (near Romsey)
- Brook, Devon (near Tavistock)
- Brook Hill, Hampshire
- Brook Street, Essex
- Brooks End, Kent
- Load Brook, Yorkshire
- Ecton Brook, Northamptonshire
- Kingswood Brook, Warwickshire
- Wymans Brook, Gloucestershire
- Clayton Brook, Lancashire
- Brook End, Buckinghamshire
- Brook Hill, Nottinghamshire
- Brook Waters, Wiltshire
- Brooks Green, Sussex
- Brook End, Hertfordshire
- Brook Green, Suffolk
- Quina Brook, Shropshire
- Lower Brook, Hampshire
- Halton Brook, Cheshire
- Holly Brook, Somerset
- Knuzden Brook, Lancashire
Photos
354 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
453 maps found.
Memories
519 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Wartime Evacuation In 1944
I was placed in an orphanage on 13th October 1943 together with my elder brother Brian. My father had died on the infamous Siam (Thailand) Railway as a forced labour navvy. He was a regular soldier and had already ...Read more
A memory of Tairgwaith in 1944 by
Post Office
I was born in Hereford in 1952 to Roland S G Hodges and Doreen his wife. I have fond memories of Kings Caple and Fawley. My grandmother ran the village post office for nearly 40 years right up to decimalization. She ran her Post ...Read more
A memory of King's Caple in 1960 by
Windsor Lanes And Garage
Uncle Phil managed this branch of Hartwells garage after managing the one on the Bath Road next to the White Horse. Before that it had been the site of Rogers (?) watermill, the millpond stretching behind up towards ...Read more
A memory of Cippenham in 1960 by
Personal Reflections
I was born in Sandleaze, Worton in 1957. I was brought up at 1 Mill Road near the Marston boundary. I remember many things about the village especially the Rose and Crown Pub and the Mill. I remember with pride the ...Read more
A memory of Worton by
Parkstone Girls' Grammar School
This was the entrance to Parkstone Girls' Grammar school where I went from 1956, with Miss Allen as headmistress, until we moved to the present site in Sopers Lane in, I think, 1960 or 61, when these buildings were ...Read more
A memory of Poole in 1956 by
The Fox And Goose Public House
Hello from Australia. I was hoping that someone looking through these "memories" might remember The Fox and Goose Public House on Penn Road. I think that this is the picture of it. My mom was the cleaner ...Read more
A memory of Penn by
Fair Oak As It Was
My first day of school was September 1965 at Fair Oak Infants. It wasn't too bad the first day as my Mum was allowed to stay at the back of the classroom, but after that I was left on my own. I became very ...Read more
A memory of Fair Oak in 1965 by
Good Times
We came down from Scotland to Stoke in 1953 as my dad had got a job in the newly opened Pit Hem Heath. As children we used to stay at the house which is sitting in front of the pit . We used to go across the brook on the pipe what ran ...Read more
A memory of Hem Heath in 1960 by
Brookhouse
I used to live at Brookhouse with my parents, great aunt and maternal grand mother. Brookhouse was split into 3 houses at the time (131, 133, 135 Holcolme Road). My grandfather (Thomas Lomax) visited at Christmases and holidays. My ...Read more
A memory of Tottington in 1955 by
Hilly Fields
Situated at the top of our road, as young children Hilly Fields was something quite magical. During winter time we would trek our home made sledges over to toboggan hill and hurtle down to the brook at the bottom of the hill at ...Read more
A memory of Enfield in 1950 by
Captions
253 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
These are the premises of the bank run as Cunliffe Brooks & Co, one of Manchester's private banks. Chancery Lane is to the left of the building, and Brown Street runs away to the right.
Abbey Fields is dissected by Finham Brook and Inchford Brook. The canons developed a series of pools along Finham Brook to provide water power for their mills, as well as fish and fowl for food.
Cheesden Brook passes under Ashworth Road, flowing to the right to join Naden Brook as it leaves Carr, Gelder and Bamford Woods.
The church lies behind a huddle of dilapidated cottages lining the Nunney Brook; here, wool was washed during the busy years of the cloth trade. Today the cottages are all restored.
The Hockley brook was a haven for the local children, as there was no swimming pool in Uttoxeter.
Blakeney stands at the edge of the Forest of Dean at the point where Blackpool Brook and Soudley Brook meet.
Mills grew along the river and St Catherine's Brook producing flour, leather, paper and cloth, until the brook was tapped for water for Bath.
Brooke House, the town centre's only housing unit, opened on 7 July 1962. A 14-storey block of 84 flats, it was named after Henry Brooke, the former Housing Minister.
Porter Brook meanders its way from Forge Dam and skirts one edge of Whiteley Woods and Bingham Park before descending over the weirs into Endcliffe Wood.
The Rose and Crown, now the Rupert Brooke, has been extended at the front, losing the outside seating area.
Brooke House, the town centre's only housing unit, opened on 7 July 1962. A 14-storey block of 84 flats, it was named after Henry Brooke, the former Housing Minister.
The last two lines of Rupert Brooke's poem 'The Old Vicarage, Grantchester' have immortalised the church: 'Stands the church clock at ten to three/And is there honey still for tea?'
This street was once called Heol-y-Nant (Brook Street) from the brook which ran through Blaenavon.
The poet Rupert Brooke lived in this picturesque village.
Even Brierley`s boatyard on the corner of the Hen Brook (right) is back in business.
Parliamentarian troops under Lord Brooke attacked. Brooke prayed publicly that 'if the cause he were in were not right and just, he might be presently cut off'. He was shot dead later that day.
This street was once called Heol-y-Nant (Brook Street) from the brook which ran through Blaenavon.
As well as the River Hodder at the east of the village, it has Crossdale Brook running through it.
Slaidburn nestles in a hollow with higher ground around it.As well as the River Hodder at the east of the village, it has Crossdale Brook running through it.
'Slaid' means 'flat marshy ground', 'burn' is the Old English word for brook, so the name means 'flat marshy ground by the brook', which describes the area well.
Note the third shop on the left, Brooke Bond & Co: this was a Manchester firm of tea and coffee importers founded by Samuel Brooke.
We now turn left from the High Street into Sheaf Street and look back down the hill to Brook Street. The scene appears very quiet, with only one car and a cyclist to be seen.
The openness of the village centre is striking, with some good later 18th/early 19th-century houses ranging either side of the grass-banked brook, with its modest urban district council railings
Children bathe in a brook on a hot day in Stanwell. Perhaps their parents are seeking a different kind of refreshment in the nearby Rising Sun public house.
Places (70)
Photos (354)
Memories (519)
Books (707)
Maps (453)