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

2 photos found. Showing results 341 to 2.

Maps

65 maps found.

Books

Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.

Memories

4,591 memories found. Showing results 171 to 180.

Those Lovely Days

These days Greylake's claim to fame is the council tip where people get rid of their rubbish, but when I was a little girl it was one of the greatest places in the world to me. If you go a couple of fields past the tip and look ...Read more

A memory of Greylake in 1955 by Marilyn Kick

Please Help!

Hi! I have recently been researching into my family history, and I came across a photograph dated to around the early 1870s in my home. On the back it read Wm Hughes photographer and oil painter in Llangefni and Amlwch on Sundays ...Read more

A memory of Llangefni by Rachel Williams

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 Terry Brooks

Fivehead Baptist Church

One Sunday in August 1998 my husband and I were privileged to attend a Sunday morning service in the Fivehead Baptist Church. It was an emotional time to sit there and read the marble plaque on the wall for my great grand ...Read more

A memory of Fivehead in 1998 by Catherine Corpe

Monton Eccles

I was born in Monton, lived in Monton during my childhood and moved to Eccles. I went to Eccles Parish School which at the time was run by nuns. They taught us pretty well and watched over us even when we washed our hands, and if anyone ...Read more

A memory of Eccles in 1973 by R. Sultan

Heswall Childrens Hospital

I would like to hear from anyone who was in Heswall Children's Hospital in 1969 to 1971. I would like to find Denise O'Gorman, we were best mates, she will be in her 50s now, she came from Cherster. So come on, someone must ...Read more

A memory of Heswall in 1971 by Marie Lafferty

Old Vicarage

My first memory of Willoughby I think was during the 1980s, it was when David Sole of 'Starsky and Hutch' fame rented the Old Vicarage for a stay in England - it was a Saturday night and he had invited villagers to a party that he was ...Read more

A memory of Willoughby by Pat Jones

Maltby Lido

I remember the Open Air Lido very well. It was managed by Sid and Minnie Armstrong. They looked after their customers well and once they got to know you they let you stay over your time and sometimes never charged you for the basket which ...Read more

A memory of Maltby in 1960 by John Bulleyment Mbe

The Red Lion Inn Thursley

I lived in The Red Lion Inn, Thursley (Bridle Cottage) from the day I was born for approximately 22 years. I was born in June 1961 and I am the oldest child of four. I lived with my parents and grandparents. My grandfather, ...Read more

A memory of Thursley in 1961 by Penny Redwood

Bristol's Cabot's Tower

Bristol's Cabot's Tower, and the penny pinching Council. Bristol's most prominent land mark, the Cabot Tower, was 100 years old in 1998. But the official opening was marked by a disastrous fire, a confidence trick and some ...Read more

A memory of Bristol in 1890 by Paul Townsend

Captions

913 captions found. Showing results 409 to 432.

Caption For Chepstow, Beaufort Square 1925

The handcart with its large hamper which was parked by the pavement in picture 76862 (p.42-43), is still in the same spot.

Caption For Exmouth, The Pavilion C1955

The town's own surveyor eventually came up with a plan for the present theatre.

Caption For Brierley Hill, High Street C1965

It was only 10 ft long, ran on 10 inch wheels, and came with front-wheel drive and independent suspension.The battery was in the boot.

Caption For Chirk, Viaduct And Aqueduct C1955

Its majesty was attenuated somewhat when the Great Western Railway line from Wolverhampton to Chester came along and was built even higher.

Caption For Andover, Round House 1898

The turnpike closed in 1872, and the building came down in the 1930s.

Caption For Dumfries, The Old And New Bridges C1890

Robert Burns came to the town in 1791 and lived with his wife and family in a house in Millhole Brae. Burns died in 1796 at the age of 36 and is buried in St Michael's Church.

Caption For Pegwell, Coastguard Cottages 1907

The bay, with its wide sandy beach, was almost certainly the landing place of the Danish brothers Hengist and Horsa, who came to Britain in 449AD to fight for the British king Vortigern against the

Caption For Exmouth, Morton Crescent 1906

Wars with France between 1793 and 1815 prevented the wealthy doing the 'Grand Tour', and so they came to Exmouth instead.

Caption For Cambridge, Emmanuel College 1914

After the dissolution came a short period of disuse before Sir Walter Mildmay restored parts of the friary for use as a college.

Caption For Cambridge, Trinity Street 1914

As more and more injured men came back from the front, a larger hut hospital was built on the playing fields of King's and Clare Colleges, with 'open-air' wards such as this one housing the patients

Caption For Kirby Muxloe, The Castle C1965

The surviving west tower is where Jane Shore, mistress of Edward IV, came after his death.

Caption For Hingham, Market Place C1955

Abraham Lincoln's ancestors came from here, and there is a bust of him in the aisle of the parish church.

Caption For Llanrhaeadr Ym Mochnant, Market Square C1955

Llanrhaeadr-ym-Mochnant's main claim to fame was its waterfall; it was also the home vicarage of William Morgan, the 16th-century translator of the Bible into Welsh.

Caption For Chester Zoo, Jimmy The Orang Outang 1957

He came in 1958, and before long had acquired a reputation amongst the staff as an escapee, always managing to get away from the island where he was housed.

Caption For Puddington, The Village C1955

It was once said of the village that 'Puddington is singularly quiet; it is so quiet that it has never yet reached the fame of a picture postcard'.

Caption For London, House Of Lords, Queen Victoria's Seal C1900

So long was her reign that the seal had to be changed to depict the familiar older figure rather than the teenager she was when she came to the throne.

Caption For London, Sir Arthur Sullivans Monument C1905

The bronze bust of Arthur Sullivan of Gilbert and Sullivan fame was erected in Victoria Embankment Gardens in 1903.

Caption For Upton Upon Severn, 1931

Apart from vinegar-making, the site of several skirmishes for control of the bridge during the Civil War, and an old church with an oddly-shaped tower, Upton's other claim to fame is that Henry Fielding

Caption For Barnstaple, North Walk 1890

North Walk was destroyed when the Lynton and Barnstaple railway came through in 1898. Subsequently, a road was built linking The Strand with the end of High Street.

Caption For Burton On Trent, Station Street 1961

The railway came to Burton in 1839 with the opening of the Birmingham & Derby Junction.

Caption For Tring, Pendley Manor C1955

This architecturally busy Tudorbethan house, built after 1871, is now (in 2000) a hotel and conference centre set in tranquil parkland; that parkland came into being through the 1440s destruction of a

Caption For Arundel, The Black Rabbit 1898

It served riverside traffic - initially boatmen, and later excursionists from Arundel to Littlehampton; they came in large numbers to view Arundel Castle and to enjoy dancing, bowls, croquet and the tea

Caption For Wotton, The Church Of St John The Evangelist 1890

Under a stone in the chancel is the body of John Saintpyere, who was rector here before the Armada came.

Caption For Pleasington, Priory Church 1894

The money for its construction came from John Butler, the squire of Pleasington Hall, who was almost killed in an accident nearby. He made the gift as a thanksgiving to God that his life was spared.