Places
28 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Horton, Berkshire
- Horton, West Glamorgan
- Horton in Ribblesdale, Yorkshire
- Horton, Somerset
- Horton, Dorset
- Horton, Lancashire
- Horton, Staffordshire
- Horton, Northamptonshire
- Horton, Wiltshire
- Horton, Kent
- Horton, Shropshire (near Wem)
- Horton, Buckinghamshire
- Little Horton, Wiltshire
- Horton Heath, Dorset
- West Horton, Northumberland
- Horton, Shropshire (near Newport)
- Horton, Avon
- Horton Heath, Hampshire
- Little Horton, Yorkshire
- Horton Common, Dorset
- Horton Cross, Somerset
- Horton Green, Cheshire
- Horton Wharf, Buckinghamshire
- Great Horton, Yorkshire
- East Horton, Northumberland
- Horton-cum-Studley, Oxfordshire
- Horton Kirby, Kent
- New Houses, Yorkshire (near Horton in Ribblesdale)
Photos
203 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
165 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
73 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Elliotts Fish & Chip Shop, High Street, Hogsthorpe.
Hi I was born in 1963 in Hogsthorpe and went to the primary school in Thames Street, I remember some amazing times in Hogsthorpe helping my Mum and Dad in the fish and chip shop rumbling the potato's ...Read more
A memory of Hogsthorpe by
Horton Kirby In The 1960's
I was born and brought up in Dartford but my aunt, Nora Hall, was housekeeper to Sir Edward Bligh and they had moved to Horton Kirby in 1961 from Swanley Village. Sir Edward took a ten-year lease upon the house that ...Read more
A memory of Horton Kirby by
Cheslyn Hay 1960 1977
My parents moved from Essington to Cheslyn Hay in 1960. We briefly lived in one of the cottages in Hollybush before moving to Low Street. I remember Harry Bates selling fruit & veg from his horse & cart and people ...Read more
A memory of Cheslyn Hay by
Christmas Eves 1960s
I was born in Stroud and lived in Cashesgreen and Paganhill until I was 11 when the family moved to Hertfordshire. My aunt lived at Minchinhampton in a house my sister now owns. As children we remember making the then very ...Read more
A memory of Rodborough in 1963 by
Great Horton
Our family lived in Lidget Green, near the Great Horton railway station. I was born in 1949 near Bradford (Wakefield), and lived in Lidget Green from toddlerhood until we emigrated in 1960. The neighborhood provided many memories ...Read more
A memory of Bradford in 1959 by
Wartime Camp At Horton Chapel
I was a child living in a large house next to the river at Horton Chapel adjacent to a bridge. In the Second World War in 1944 prior to Normandy, a squadron of Canadian Engineers camped next to the river and built a ...Read more
A memory of Chartham in 1944 by
Early Memories
My birth on 30 Nov 1946 at 34 Oldberry Road, Burnt Oak, is where it all started for me, but my mother & her parents moved into the house when it was built for the LCC. She's 89 now, but recalls that she, as a 9-yr-old in 1928, ...Read more
A memory of Burnt Oak in 1946 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
Church Choir
I think it was about 1959 when a new Vicar arrived in the village of Yapton he was the Rev. Nelson. I was 12 at the time, His wife who we only knew as Mrs Nelson decided to start a church choir. So with a few of my cousins and girls I ...Read more
A memory of Yapton in 1959 by
Chattin And Horton Shopping Store
IWAS FIVE IN 1964 AND IN THE HIGH STREET WAS A LARGE SHOP CALLED CHATTIN AND HORTON. IT WAS A WONDERFUL SHOP ESPECIALLY AT CHRISTMAS TIME WHEN FATHER CHRISTMAS USED TO BE THERE WITH HIS SACK OF TOYS. YOU ...Read more
A memory of Brierley Hill in 1964 by
Captions
24 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
Here we see a quiet corner of the Ribblesdale village of Horton-in-Ribblesdale.
The Ribblesdale village of Horton-in-Ribblesdale is dominated by the stepped profile of Pen-y-Ghent, 2,277 feet high and one of Yorkshire's famous Three Peaks, seen here in the background of this view

The third of the grand houses, Horton Place, was still a Tudor mansion although the owner, John Trotter, would have it rebuilt within a few years.
The eastern chapel was the Horton family's worshipping place.
On the way from Clapham to Horton-in-Ribblesdale we pass through the village of Austwick.
Today the parish of Fair Oak incorporates Horton Heath, and its population is now over 8,000.
Abbot Horton had started the work, and John Boyfield carried it on.
Geese run loose on the grass at Mannington hamlet, midway between the villages of Holt and Horton in the hills north of Wimborne.
The Downs, like Horton and the common, were now part of London's Green Belt, and no further development would take place on them.
Albert Fort, on the headland at one end of the bay, was built to guard the strategically important waters of the Solent.
Heights (just right of centre) is not, as local myth says, a wind- break for the golf course on the top of the Heights; it was actually constructed as a gunnery range for troops sta- tioned at Bovisand Fort, on
Albert Fort, on the headland at one end of the bay, was built to guard the strategically important waters of the Solent.
At the time this photograph was taken, the fort on the Nothe was equipped with quick-firing guns, searchlights and accommodation for a battalion of soldiers.
Magnus Barefoot built a timber fort on St Patrick's Isle between c1098-1103.
Much earlier than that it was a hill fort. One
The village, thought to date to Saxon times, takes its name from the nearby hill-fort. On
Our Iron Age ancestors appreciated the importance of the site and built a hill fort on the top, but it was abandoned when the Romans conquered the region.
This photograph shows the skyline from the profile of Bell Stone (left, top) along to the ramparts of the Iron Age hill-fort on Eggardon Hill (right, top).
But nearby Oldbury Hill has traces of Neanderthal hunters and an Iron Age fort on its slopes.
But nearby Oldbury Hill has traces of Neanderthal hunters and an Iron Age fort on its slopes.
Magnus Barefoot built a timber fort on St Patrick's Isle in about 1098-1103; the bulk of the surviving fortifications date from the time of Thomas, First Earl of Derby, and were constructed in 1460-1504
Rodborough Fort, on the skyline, now masked by trees, remains an unmistakeable landmark.
Four hundred of these workers combed wool in their homes at Forton, Scorton and Nether Wyresdale.
His was the thought behind the fortresses that were built in the late 1880s on and around Box Hill; there is still a fort on the summit of the hill, a testimony of a war that was never fought.
Places (28)
Photos (203)
Memories (73)
Books (0)
Maps (165)