Places
4 places found.
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Photos
48 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
20 maps found.
Books
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Memories
59 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
141st Hb Rga
I'm not from East Ham but my Grandad served with the 141st HB which was formed in East Ham in 1915, they billeted in local schools. Any ideas of local names of schools? I think they used Clockhouse and Manor Farms, he used to mention a place ...Read more
A memory of East Ham by
John Mansfield School In 70's
Hi my name is Maria I went to John Mansfield School Lived Dogsthorpe road. Love to hear from you if you were there? :)
A memory of Peterborough by
Memories Of High Street
This is a very significant picture to me although taken a good many years after we left High Street for Mill Lane. My sister, Hilda and I were both born in one of the houses just beyond the white building, in our time that was ...Read more
A memory of Donington in 1930 by
Ferry Approach
My dad opened his first shop in Ferry Approach, a cafe, it was situated directly outside the woolwich foot tunnel with plenty of dock workers and factory workers passing by every day and a constant stream of traffic queuing for the ...Read more
A memory of Woolwich by
The Shop In The Picture.
My father, Peter Mansfield, owned this shop from c1955. He was an electrician and refrigeration engineer. I can remember filling cans with paraffin for my father to deliver. My future husband says he only married me because my ...Read more
A memory of Felsted in 1955 by
The High Street Sayer's Store 'nim' And Phyl Alen
My name is Barbara Tester and I live in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. My beloved (late) husband, Brian Tester, was born on 26th July, 1930 at No. 1 Station Cottages, 1 Station Road, Ardingly. His ...Read more
A memory of Ardingly in 1958 by
Sutton Forest Side
I recall living at 163 Mansfield Road in 1947, when we had real winter, close to Kitty Hibberts shop, this is now a Chinese takeaway. Across the road was cobbler Betts Hut at the top of Barnes Street, on the opposite ...Read more
A memory of Sutton In Ashfield in 1947 by
Morning Service At St Mary's In The 1960s
Like many young folks of the 1960s who grew up in Cheshunt churchgate area, when the time came to marry you almost always chose St Mary's as the place to have your wedding. It is a lovely old church. I also ...Read more
A memory of Cheshunt in 1965 by
Police House 1939 45
The Police House was located on Radcliffe Road, Cropwell Butler. (now called 'The Old Police House'). On the front wall it bore a sign bearing the words 'County Police'. From 1939 to 1945 it was occupied by the Village ...Read more
A memory of Cropwell Butler in 1940 by
My Childhood In Hornchurch
My parents bought our house in Mansfield Gardens in 1934 for £500. It had no garage but nobody in the road had a car anyway. My name was Jenifer Shearring. I went to North Street Primary School, infants and juniors from1950 ...Read more
A memory of Hornchurch by
Captions
25 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
Mansfield lies some 14 miles north of Nottingham and to the west of Sherwood Forest.
The ivy-clad inn on the left of the photograph is the Miller of Mansfield, a famous pub in the Thames Valley.
The Eyre Arms pub is still a Mansfield tenancy, although the brewer has recently been taken over. The filling station still exists, and there is another one opposite.
It was in this house on the left that Jane Austen wrote Mansfield Park, Emma and Persuasion.
The building to the right of Beecroft's was the Tudor house of the Earl of Mansfield. All these buildings were pulled down to make way for the new Council House in the 1920s.
It was here that Jane Austen wrote 'Mansfield Park', 'Emma' and 'Persuasion'.
It was here that Jane Austen wrote 'Mansfield Park', 'Emma' and 'Persuasion'.
The Mansfield, Sutton and District Co-operative Society shop on the corner (left) was funded by Earl Manvers in 1895.
The ivy-clad inn on the left of the photograph is the Miller of Mansfield, a famous pub in the Thames Valley.
Further east, 18th-century Mansfield House on the right with its two canted bay windows and pedimented doorcase is the best building, while the one with three dormers beyond is now a county branch library
It was in this house on the left of the photograph that Jane Austen wrote 'Mansfield Park', 'Emma' and 'Persuasion'.
It was in this house on the left of the photograph that Jane Austen wrote 'Mansfield Park', 'Emma' and 'Persuasion'.
It is reputed that the Miller of Mansfield, seen on the left, got its name from a story concerning a miller who, when entertaining King Henry II, presented him with a pie filled with royal deer that had
The inn covered in ivy on the left of the photograph is the Miller of Mansfield, a famous pub in the Thames Valley.
There are actually two Langwiths - Nether and Upper - in north-east Derbyshire, near the border with Nottinghamshire and not far from Mansfield.
Opposite the well-known Miller of Mansfield hotel and pub, mainly Georgian with older parts, is the Goring Free Church, dated 1893, on the corner of Manor Road, still looking pretty fresh in this view
Places were often where pillories were sited, and though there are few surviving references to their use in 17th-century Nottinghamshire, they are known to have existed at Nottingham, Newark, Bingham and Mansfield
This view from the Mansfield Road junction looks uphill along Nottingham Road, the principal shopping street, lined by mostly 19th- century buildings.
The Mansfield, Sutton and District Co-operative Society shop on the corner (left) was funded by Earl Manvers in 1895.
The pedimented building is Carr of York's Town Hall of 1773 built in local Mansfield sandstone; the ground floor meat market is now a shopping arcade, the Butter Market.
The library has an ornate chimneypiece carved in oak by a highly skilled carver from Mansfield.
At No 17 next door, David Mansfield Scott was a confectioner and mineral water manufacturer; his business operated beside that of Miss Kennington, 'Fancy Draper & Milliner'.
This half-timbered building with its many gables was built in 1895 for the Mansfield Brewery at a cost of £543. Since the 1950s the porch has been converted into a stone-built bow window.
At No 17 next door, David Mansfield Scott was a confectioner and mineral water manufacturer; his business operated beside that of Miss Kennington, 'Fancy Draper & Milliner'.
Places (4)
Photos (48)
Memories (59)
Books (0)
Maps (20)