Places
18 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Much Birch, Hereford & Worcester
- Birch, Greater Manchester
- Birch, Essex
- Birch Green, Lancashire
- Birch Green, Hertfordshire
- Birch Cross, Staffordshire
- Birch Green, Essex
- Birch Hill, Berkshire
- Birch Vale, Derbyshire
- Birches Green, West Midlands
- Birch Heath, Cheshire
- Birches Head, Staffordshire
- Horsell Birch, Surrey
- Birch Acre, Hereford & Worcester
- Birch Berrow, Hereford & Worcester
- Little Birch, Hereford & Worcester
- Birch Green, Hereford & Worcester
- Netherton, Hereford & Worcester (near Much Birch)
Photos
22 photos found. Showing results 21 to 22.
Maps
84 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
301 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
Newarthill 1950/60s Tosh And I
Every now and then I reminisce and take a trip down memory lane, of my childhood days growing up in Newarthill on Burnside Rd. I remember Tosh McGarry and I going to Father Gillan's jumble sale and buying an old fox fur ...Read more
A memory of Newarthill by
I Was Born In Chippinghurst Manor. On The 15th July 1942..
Due to the fact that my mother was in Oxford, to escape the bombing in London while she was pregnant, during the second world war, she gave birth to me in Chippinghurst Manor on 15th July 1942. ROBERT NEIL CRAWFORD.
A memory of Chippinghurst Manor by
Bluebells
My godmother and her parents lived 'forever' at Gravel Road, just up from the small shop on the Park Avenue end. With a marvellous garden of flowers, fruit and poultry; a walkway tunnel of Quince, a black & white tiled pathway to ...Read more
A memory of Farnborough in 1950 by
Looking Back At My Life Growing Up, And Working In Fareham Plus More.
Leaving Southampton Road School in 1954, I started working on the outskirts of Titchfield for Sanders & Sons in their tomato glass houses, which was a good working start for me. ...Read more
A memory of Fareham by
Childhood In Elmsleigh Road
I lived at number 42 Elmsleigh Road from 1947 until about 1963.My pals and I played in the street in safety as there were few cars. We played "tin can tommy" and "cannon" otherwise we were on Wandsworth Common climbing ...Read more
A memory of Wandsworth by
3 Eardiston View Menith Wood
I was around six when we moved from Bliss Gate to Menith Wood and left Menith Wood when I just turned fourteen. For the eight years to me Menith Wood was the best place in the world just a peaceful hidden clean beautiful ...Read more
A memory of Menithwood by
Oxton Memories
I lived in Oxton from the late 50s to the early 80s, and have many fond memories. Does any body remember Fred the barber in Rose Mount. He was quite a character, and nobody went there unless they wanted a short back and sides, ...Read more
A memory of Birkenhead by
1961 To 1977
My family lived in Goodyers Ave. Dad had #65 built in 1960/61 for around £13k by the next door neighbour who sold us the plot. Best mates were Antony Draper [Oakridge Ave], Chris Francis [Craighall Ave],Caroline West [Links Drive] ...Read more
A memory of Radlett by
Birth Place
I was born at 28 Newlyn Drive in 1944. We lived with my grandparents. Moved to Romiley in 1948. Sadly my parents moved us all to London in 1951 the worst time of my life. The only time I was happy was during the long summer holidays when I went back to the old home.
A memory of Bredbury by
Cheslyn Hay 1960 1977
My parents moved from Essington to Cheslyn Hay in 1960. We briefly lived in one of the cottages in Hollybush before moving to Low Street. I remember Harry Bates selling fruit & veg from his horse & cart and people ...Read more
A memory of Cheslyn Hay by
Captions
47 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
Common oak, silver birch, sweet chestnut and buckthorn, loved by the Brimstone butterfly, abound in Wyre Forest, along with Norway spruce.
Walter Birch was among the first to build really large factories.
The ornate clock tower and gateway were added in 1874 to designs by the famous pier designer Eugenius Birch.
At the left is a silver birch, which also survives today.
All four buildings in this view are Victorian: the one on the left, Birch Cottage, is of the 1860s, and the one behind the telephone pole, Jubilee Cottage, is dated 1887, while the others are of about
There are connections with the Sussex iron industry, for an ironmaster once lived here.The 17th-century house Birch Grove was the home of Harold Macmillan, the former Prime Minister.
This was by Eugenius Birch, who also designed Brighton's West Pier, and was completed in 1872.
Out to the left is the Vicarage Field shopping mall, while beyond the silver birch is the church hall extension opened in 1985.
This view is in the Sherwood Forest Country Park, an area of 450 acres with many of the best surviving ancient oak trees amid silver birch, younger oaks and bracken.
They camped in the grounds of a house in Church Street called Silver Birches, long since demolished.
The 17th-century house Birch Grove was the home of Harold Macmillan, the former Prime Minister.
The Memorial School, opposite the majestic Middleham Castle (c1180), was erected in memory of Rector James Birch.
At the Dissolution of the Monasteries, it was given as a private house to Thomas Birch, one of the yeoman of the Crown.
The silver birches (left) have grown considerably over the 19 years between the two photographs.
Through the Cloisters to the south-west lies the Birching Tower, used until corporal punishment ceased in the 1960s.
Through the Cloisters to the south-west lies the Birching Tower, used until corporal punishment ceased in the 1960s.
This was overcome by the building of an unsatisfactory wooden jetty in 1824, which in turn was replaced between 1853 and 1857 by Birch's iron jetty.
It burned down in 1908, and the front block was rebuilt by Thomas Thurlow, who also designed Walter Birch's factory in Leigh Street.
It could be said that the modern history of Barrow-in-Furness began with the birth of the Furness Railway in 1846, when a line was opened from Kirky and Crooklands to Rampside and Barrow.
In February 1960 the church bells rang throughout the villages of Kent to herald the birth of Prince Andrew.
The arch commemorates the birth of the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII, in 1841.
In 1519 a Bewdley girl gave birth to his illegitimate son, later created Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Richmond and Somerset.
Before the birth of theme parks, a day out in the late 1950s (when comparatively few people owned a car) was by Midland Red bus to Groby Pool, Swithland Woods and Bradgate Park, with the
Places (18)
Photos (22)
Memories (301)
Books (0)
Maps (84)