Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Places
4 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
68 photos found. Showing results 241 to 68.
Maps
70 maps found.
Books
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Memories
713 memories found. Showing results 121 to 130.
Memories Of Smallfield
From the other side of the world I came across this memory page of Smallfield. I worked at Smallfield Hospital 1966/67 attached to the nurses dining room. Loved working there and the people I met. Unfortunately, I have lost ...Read more
A memory of Smallfield
My Memory Of This Area
On the left is the entrance to Victoria Park, just where the car is parked. Originally there were lovely wrought iron gates which Queen Victoria had opened on the dedication of the park. The council had them removed much to ...Read more
A memory of Finchley by
Leigh Road And Living In Eastleigh
My grandmother lived in a flat in the Eagles building behind Collins the butchers. In the 1951 picture, the girl on the bicycle could easily be me! I would have been 10 then and my coat was a light green with black ...Read more
A memory of Eastleigh by
Lady Hall Holmes
The Holmes Family of LADY HALL, Farming and Iron ore on the census it had 6 rooms, They named one Daughter Lady presuming after Lady Hall. Well may add more later Sandra Nee Holmes 5th Generation down the ladder. 1841 Head of the house was Thomas Holmes, wife Sarah .Ref- HO107 Census Millom.
A memory of Lady Hall by
Pond Walking
About 1949/50 I was 10.The ponds had dried up because there was no water coming from the spring in the corner where the Grove entrance met the High Street. There used to be a set of steps that went down into the pond at that point.If ...Read more
A memory of Carshalton by
The Tin School
I was at this school from 1949-57, when I lived in Longacres. I seem to remember a bronze plaque on the hall wall stating that it had been built in 1908. It had evidently been built as a temporary structure, but had managed to last ...Read more
A memory of Durham by
Tunnel Behind Rookwood Close
My parents lived in Rookwood Close from 1966 to 1972. I remember playing in the woods behind the houses and discovering what looked like a railway tunnel going under the hill. I was able to venture in 20 feet or so but the ...Read more
A memory of Grays by
Haven Green Trainspotting In The Fifties
I remember seeing CITY OF TRURO come through one evening. It had been taken out of Swindon museum and restored. I also remember seeing the BROWN BOVERI GAS TURBINE on several occassions. It had been ordered by ...Read more
A memory of Ealing by
From Leaking Majesty, To Glittering Citadel, And To Dust, The Last Keep Of Travis Court
I have a pic of my twin sis Jenny and a paint-brush, it's 1959, she's nearly 8, glossing skirting in the middle kitchen (there were 3). Until it was habitable ...Read more
A memory of Farnham Royal by
Happiest Early Days
I grew up in Elmstead Market moving there when I was 18 months old and left in 1965 when I was 8. I went to Elmstead School where Vera Norfolk was my first teacher and the headteacher was Mr Clegg. Vera's sister Muriel ran the ...Read more
A memory of Elmstead by
Captions
788 captions found. Showing results 289 to 312.
The name lives on in the Godolphin racing stable (ironically owned by Sheikh Makhtoum); it is named after Godolphin Arabian, one of the three Arab stallions from which all British racehorses are descended
Part of the roof is covered with corrugated iron - this was used when thatchers were difficult to find.
The charcoal produced had a multitude of uses, particularly in the smelting of iron.
Though the North East is readily identified with coal mining, shipbuilding and iron and steel, among its lesser-known industries was the construction of railway locomotives and rolling stock.
It was a boom town during the 19th-century iron-mining era.
In 1900 the Sheepbridge Coal & Iron Co secured an interest in the Dinnington Main Coal Co, which had been formed to exploit the coalfield to the north of Kiveton Park.
There was a timber bridge here by 1172, but the present one with cast-iron spans dates from 1821.
The brick barn on the left at Red House Farm and the iron field fence remain, but the houses on the right have been altered and a few demolished, including the single-storey one on the corner of the quaintly-named
The picture shows the glass and cast-iron winter gardens built on the back of the Library and Museum. This ornate structure was destroyed by enemy bombing during the Second World War.
Just behind, and visible by the telephone box, is an ornate Victorian cast-iron pump.
Then, it was a small town serving an agricultural area, but the arrival of the iron road changed all that. This picture was taken when the railways were at the height of their popularity.
In the background is the third bridge at Hampton, opened in 1865; its wrought iron lattice girders of five spans were replaced with the present bridge in 1933.
Dartmouth could quite justifiably claim to be responsible for the Portuguese national dish of salt cod, for in the 16th to 18th centuries local ships traded clothes and iron goods for Newfoundland
The District Council's policy of tree planting is in evidence here, with young saplings protected by iron cases lining the road.
These seem to have more in common with Nelson's navy than with the iron-clad battleships that were starting to dock at Devonport at this time.
A little along from the Town Hall we see the prestigious Cromwell Hotel, embellished with an airy cast iron balcony.
Spanning the street are a pair of open decorative iron arches on which are hung the town lamps. On the left is a formidable display of boots and shoes cascading over the shop facia.
This picture shows the glass and cast-iron winter gardens built on the back of the Library and Museum. This ornate structure was destroyed by enemy bombing during the Second World War.
This photograph is taken inside the walls of the Iron Age hillfort of Worlebury.
The town was founded on a ford over the River Aire, near Kirkstall Forge, where the monks of Kirkstall Abbey once smelted iron ore.
The houses on the north corner of Laura Place became an hotel in 1866 and acquired the ornate iron and glass porch early this century.
With the decline in industries such as iron, steel and coal, many villages such as this went into steep decline. There are still signs of life, however!
Various Iron Age sites and encampments illustrate the area's wealth of history.
On the left is Mr Kerrison the butcher's ornamented shop front, with a refined iron balcony overhead.
Places (4)
Photos (68)
Memories (713)
Books (0)
Maps (70)