Places
3 places found.
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Photos
939 photos found. Showing results 341 to 360.
Maps
22 maps found.
Books
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Memories
912 memories found. Showing results 171 to 180.
Boyhood And Teenage Years In Chopwell By Douglas Hind
I was born on 23rd. September 1928 son of John and Frances May Hind; we lived in Hall Road Bungalows until 1935 when we moved to Joseph Terrace. I attended the Infant and Junior schools-headmaster ...Read more
A memory of Chopwell by
Bells Close 1948 59 Denise Drysdale
I lived at 23 Swinburn terrace bells close and went to Sugley Parish church. Lemington infants then the big school. I left there when I was 15 and did not make it to Claremont. I was born at Dilston Hall hospital ...Read more
A memory of Lemington by
Anstey Born And Bred
I was born in Hollow Road in 1944. I then lived in Forest Gate and Cropston Road where I lived until I got married in 1966. I have one brother Bill and two half brothers Charles and Keith and two half sisters Susan and Jane. I ...Read more
A memory of Anstey by
My Memory Of Chopwell
After reading the other accounts of Chopwell I decided to add my own, I hope I have got the names and dates right as I am doing this from memory, apologies if I get some of it wrong. All my mother’s side of the family were from ...Read more
A memory of Chopwell by
Happy Days
My family moved from Tottenham in 1949. There was only 5 children and Mum and Dad at the time. Nice new terraced house in Faringdon Ave - Gooshayes end. I was born in that house in 1954. My younger sisters (twins) were born in Oldchurch ...Read more
A memory of Harold Hill by
Blacthorn In The 1940's/50's
I was born in 1940 in Blackthorn and went to school there and lived in Northern Terrace,Blackthorn. It was a lovely place to grow up in. Ellis Wilkins
A memory of Blackthorn by
My Life In Fishersgate And Southwick.
I was born in Southlands hospital in 1932. In 1935 I moved into 14 West Road Fishersgate and (when old enough)went to Fishersgate Infant school. In 1943 we moved into 21 Fishersgate Terrace, which at that time ...Read more
A memory of Southwick by
Woolworths 1955/6
I started out working life at the pontypool store ,Mr Galander manager ,in the stockroom with Gwen later on the floor 'then being moved to Newport! Those were the days when ponty Meant something!! The streets were full on Fridays ...Read more
A memory of Pontypool by
Ah, Lynford Hall Place Of Mystery!
Stationed at RAF Lakenheath in the mid 1960's, friends and I would drive out to Lynford Hall to have a pint in the pub there. You always felt like you were stepping back into the WW II era. The pub had a roaring ...Read more
A memory of Mundford by
Evacuation
I am with my Dad, peter Brandon, who was also evacuated to the area during the war with his 2 brothers and sister and parents. They were in a terrace of cottages, Dinnaton Cottages south od Swimbridge. he went to Swimbridge school, ...Read more
A memory of Swimbridge by
Captions
544 captions found. Showing results 409 to 432.
The new homes ranged from small terraced houses, three-bedroom semi-detached houses and four-bedroom houses.
Of the 1850s terraces with white band course beyond Marks and Spencer's, only one house survives. In the far distance is the Hazell, Watson and Viney printing works with its tall chimney.
Opposite is a smaller terraced house boasting a large hanging sign, `Formerly the Tiger`, which had been another pub up until 1916.
Looking east with terrace houses on the left, then a thatched cottage and a 19th-century house with an Ionic porch.
outside the present entrance to Hornsey Town Hall and towards the town centre soon after the completion of most of the buildings, and a decade before the influx of extensive but quite special Edwardian terraces
This busy scene looking along the river terrace steps on Victoria Embankment shows the1860s Town Arms pub by the bridge, the gabled building with bay windows and white stucco dressings.
Built between 1881 and 1882, these eight large houses were known as Granville Terrace. In 1897, a Mr Robert Stacey bought the first five houses and converted them into the Hotel Saint Cloud.
Can you make out the concrete terraces that have been constructed on each side of the village slipway?
This kind of view is often found in this region - 19th-century terraces sprang up to house workers in the coal and iron industries - but Kenfig has a long history dating back to the Bronze and Iron Ages
- Brightside, Attercliffe and Darnall - to accommodate the tens of thousands of new workers in the heavy steel industry, but the old town was also increasingly surrounded by rows and rows of terraces
The terrace at the left survives but on the right all beyond the 1880s bank (now Atkinson and Keene estate agents) has been demolished, as far along as the parapeted building.
In the foreground, the area right of the road is now a new estate, and opposite is a 1930s brick terrace. The little stone building on the left still stands, and is used as a store.
This kind of view is often found in this region - 19th-century terraces sprang up to house workers in the coal and iron industries - but Kenfig has a long history dating back to the Bronze and Iron
Of this good 1830s terrace only two bays survive, those to the left of W H Smith, the pet and garden stores, which also retain the shopfront which was added to the house's facade.
Looking eastward, this view shows one of the town's saddest architectural losses: Colebrooke Terrace, a shallow crescent of four pairs of Regency stucco villas.
Behind Silvia Crowe's landscape of paved terraces, trees and a pool is the exhibition hall and offices designed by Robert Matthew, Johnson-Marshall and Partners and completed in 1962.
The sides of the Knoll are fringed with medieval strip linchets, or terraces, formed for ploughing very steep slopes.
Further east is the seaside resort, built soon after 1800 in stucco terraces with Waterloo balconies. Not until late Victorian times did the two parts merge.
The church of St John the Baptist, with its Perpendicular tower, stands on a terrace overlooking the village and boasted a peal of six bells, three of which were cast at least a century before the Reformation
Nash surrounded it with grand terraces of houses and laid out the bones of the park, including the lake. This view looks into the lake's north-west arm.
Two motor cars are visible, but few street markings and signs, apart from the one on the right by the bow-windowed shop in the stone-built terrace.
Beyond the terrace of houses, two crescents converge through landscaped gardens and woodland to the central bandstand.
Pier Terrace, on the left, has not yet been converted to penny arcades. The large building on the right is the Imperial Café and Grosvenor House Hotel. Butlin's amusement park is in the foreground.
After the terraced houses there is a large white house which may be the former Angel Inn, then a private residence. Nearby is Angel Yard; Barlow Road broke through here some years later.
Places (3)
Photos (939)
Memories (912)
Books (0)
Maps (22)