Places
36 places found.
Did you mean: street or streetly ?
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Heathfield, Sussex (near Cade Street)
- Street, Somerset
- Chester-Le-Street, Durham
- Adwick Le Street, Yorkshire
- Scotch Street, County Armagh
- Friday Street, Surrey
- Potter Street, Essex
- Boughton Street, Kent
- Newgate Street, Hertfordshire
- Streetly, West Midlands
- Shalmsford Street, Kent
- Green Street Green, Greater London
- Boreham Street, Sussex
- Park Street, Hertfordshire
- Cade Street, Sussex
- Appleton-le-Street, Yorkshire
- Hare Street, Hertfordshire (near Buntingford)
- Romney Street, Kent
- Trimley Lower Street, Suffolk
- Streetly End, Cambridgeshire
- Hare Street, Hertfordshire (near Stevenage)
- Brandish Street, Somerset
- Colney Street, Hertfordshire
- Langley Street, Norfolk
- Silver Street, Somerset (near Street)
- Street, Yorkshire (near Glaisdale)
- Street, Lancashire
- Street, Devon
- Street, Cumbria (near Orton)
- Street, Somerset (near Chard)
- Bird Street, Suffolk
- Black Street, Suffolk
- Ash Street, Suffolk
- Broad Street, Wiltshire
- Brome Street, Suffolk
- Penn Street, Buckinghamshire
Photos
21,808 photos found. Showing results 3,621 to 3,640.
Maps
1,622 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 4,345 to 1.
Memories
6,666 memories found. Showing results 1,811 to 1,820.
My House
The white house shown was the house I grew up in. If this photo is 1960 I would have been living there at the time it was taken - how fascinating to see this. The street at the time was the main A2 and very busy. What memories this has rekindled.
A memory of Boughton Hill
Holidays
It's just great to look at the old pictures of Blakeney's High Street, it seems almost like yesterday when I used to walk from my gran's house in the row of cottages where the railway bridge used to be. We used to go on ...Read more
A memory of Blakeney in 1955 by
Snowed In
If my memory is correct it was the winter of 1940/41 when I was a teenager, working for a long distance transport company from the midlands. We had left Carlisle on our way south via Shap Fell when we were caught in a blizzard and the roads ...Read more
A memory of Carlisle in 1940 by
First Job
This picture has particularly fond memories as on the immediate right is Darks the Jewellers' shop, where I started my first job as an apprentice. The window immediately above the sun blind is the watch repairer's workshop. Two doors away is Timothy Whites, a name long gone from our High Streets.
A memory of Barnstaple in 1966 by
The Late 1950s
I remember the baker's van coming down to Church Street in the summer, we could choose a cake, the baker would open the back of the little van and pull out the drawers, out would come a thousand wasps. No one ran for cover and the cakes ...Read more
A memory of Burham in 1959 by
The Mining Community
Although I no longer live in Northumberland, I still have a soft spot for North Broomhill. I was born in School Row in 1943. From there we moved to Coronation Terrace in 1947 which was a complex of rudimentary row of two ...Read more
A memory of North Seaton in 1940 by
Ducie Street
My Nan and Granddad lived in Ducie Street for many years up until their deaths in the late 1960s and early 1970s. My Mum and Dad had two rooms at the top of the house when they married in 1960 and I came along in November 1961. My ...Read more
A memory of Clapham by
Riding School
I remember the ponies coming along the beach and back to the stables along the high street, past what was then the cinema, now a village hall.
A memory of Rhosneigr
1980s
I was the newspaper reporter for the Coventry Evening Telegraph regional office on Wood Street for a year and lived off Joseph Way on a new housing development. I remember reporting on time share appartments at the former home of ...Read more
A memory of Stratford-upon-Avon by
Dukeshouse Wood Camp School Hexham (Part One)
My school was one of the first to go to Dukeshouse Wood Camp School just outside Hexham. This was in November 1945 shortly after the Second World War with the lads from Gateshead at Alexandra Road school. ...Read more
A memory of Hexham in 1945 by
Captions
5,381 captions found. Showing results 4,345 to 4,368.
In 1836 it became the premises of the wine merchant William Cunnington, and extensive cellars run under the road and the buildings on the opposite side of the street.
The old town, spread picturesquely round part of Mount's Bay, has delightfully narrow streets that ascend the hill from the fine esplanade at the edge of the sea.
This is a detail of the frontage of 34 West Street, which was the `Bridport News` office and West Dorset Printing Works in 1909.
This imposing, ornate gateway once stood where the Strand becomes Fleet Street, and was erected in 1672 to a design by Wren.The effigies portray Stuart monarchs.
This is taken from the north end of the Green, looking south towards Hall Street, showing the wide expanse of the Green, where fairs are still held.
This is one of Lancaster's main shopping streets. Note the radio shop on the right—in country districts, the radio, with its BBC Home and Light programmes, helped people to keep in touch.
At the other end of Frimley High Street, we cross the River Blackwater, which is the boundary between Surrey and Hampshire.
A delivery boy rests with his bicycle between rounds on the right, while down the street a policeman looks out for traffic to direct.
Billingshurst is a Roman settlement on Stane Street. St Mary's church, built on a mound with access to the churchyard via a causeway, is shown in the photograph, and has Roman bricks in the walls.
On the right-hand side of the street stand flint-walled houses with brick dressings.
The town, built in oolitic limestone, is a most attractive one: its streets curve up and down hill picturesquely.
St Michael's House, the Victorian home of Mrs Brandham at No 7 Pound Street, became St Michael's Hotel.
Centre left is the combined police and fire station in Tower Street, referred to earlier. Note the six-storey tower.
Here we see the top of the High Street, which is little changed today.The porchway on the left belongs to the Moot Hall, which was the town hall until 1974 and is now open to the public.
The town was changing, and the old order was changing with it. 45 new residential roads were added to the street map in the 1920s.
Woolhall Street, beyond Everard's, marks the site of the medieval market Toll House and the later Wool Hall, which was demolished to create the street.
Prime Minister Harold Wilson was born here, and attended New Street Council School.
Visitors to the tourist attraction of Stockbridge enter downhill at either end of the High Street. Almost a mile long, it runs east-west, with narrow ribbons of houses on either side.
The awnings are out at the far end of the street to protect the stock in the shop windows from the summer sunshine, and in the foreground we can see frames for the awnings that have not been put up yet
Here, a little further north up High Street, we look west along Bedford Road. The late 19th-century town hall is on the left.
Going east from Market Place along Church Street, we reach the small square with the brown stone church on its north side, a curiously villagey one for a town.
The lane descends to Castle Street, from where this vies was taken; we see St Osyths, a good brick house of 1700 with earlier timber-framed ranges, and the farmhouse to the Prebendal.
In South Street, Shodfriars Hall is an echo of the four friaries established in the medieval town.
Gainsborough, an ancient market town, was also a busy river port; here we look up Silver Street, which led from the river wharves and warehouses to the market place.
Places (385)
Photos (21808)
Memories (6666)
Books (1)
Maps (1622)

