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 4,141 to 4,160.
Maps
1,622 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 4,969 to 1.
Memories
6,666 memories found. Showing results 2,071 to 2,080.
Rock And Roll Years
I lived in South Harrow from birth in 1945 in 125 Roxeth Green Avenue. I attended Roxeth Hill primary school until failing the eleven plus and then went to Lascelles Secondary Modern. Not the best of pupils although I was ...Read more
A memory of South Harrow in 1959 by
Tricorn And Charlotte St
I worked at Fine Fare and the Landport Drapery Bazaar in 1970/71 and was a member of the Tricorn Club on top of the Tricorn. My favourite locals were the Coxs Hotel and the Casbah Pub both in Charlotte St. The landlord ...Read more
A memory of Portsmouth in 1971 by
Earliest Memory
I was born 5 Monica Street in 1943, my earliest memory is of a huge hound leaning over me - for some reason I wasn't frightened. In my twenties looking through some photos with my mum I found my hound, a very small terrier which ...Read more
A memory of Maesteg in 1943 by
The Old Odeon.
If you walked around the first corner to the Odeon you got a good view of the old Blast Furnaces that use to turn Corby's night sky orange. It never got dark in the Corby of my childhood. The Candle and all the steel and tube mills lit ...Read more
A memory of Corby in 1962 by
Ye Original Pharmacy
My dad was Eddie Cattell who ran Ye Original Pharmacy at 104 Leicester Road opposite Sandhurst Street School. We lived at the shop before moving to 41 Fairstone Hill when the houses there were built. I went to Sandhurst ...Read more
A memory of Oadby by
A Wartime Symbol Of Defiance A Giant Meat Pie!
One of Bradford’s famous literary sons was the author and playwright J B Priestley, who was born in Mannheim Road, Bradford, on 13 September 1894. J B Priestley provided Britain with a rather strange ...Read more
A memory of Bradford in 1940 by
Happy Days In Bakersfields
I was born in Nottingham in 1939 and we lived on Parkdale Road, Bakersfields. Have many happy memories of Parkdale Junior School - Parkdale Cow Sheds! Mrs Stubbins taught the 5-year olds, then Miss Walmsley, Miss ...Read more
A memory of Nottingham in 1949 by
A Watchet Boy
I was born in Woodland Road in 1948. The houses were brand new. I used to watch the builders from Dates going up the road to work on the houses at the top. I would stand on next door's doorstep and swear at them as they passed. My ...Read more
A memory of Watchet by
Dancing In The Afternoon Matinee
I remember dancing after school in Horsell town hall on Horsell main street in the 50s. I was at Goldsworth School, Woking in those years. My friend David and I were always dancing there, on Wednesdays I think. ...Read more
A memory of Horsell in 1952 by
The Coronation
I was only 3 years old and we lived in Elthorne Rd just across the street from The Militia Canteen on the corner of Villier St. I do remember the flags and bunting draped across the front of the buildingl and the coronation ...Read more
A memory of Uxbridge in 1952 by
Captions
5,381 captions found. Showing results 4,969 to 4,992.
Visit today, and see that the pub has gone, and that offices and shops of little architectural merit have come to dominate the street scene.
High street shoppers in 1931 were finding that prices were continuing to fall back to their pre-Great War levels.
The A15 is in fact a Roman road – Ermine Street.
East Street used to lead from the Common Acre past a number of big houses. On the right, three dormers mark the roof of the Manse to the Congregational Church, built in 1780.
Here we see an empty street scene before motor traffic was commonplace. W Pocock, on the right, is a butcher's shop.
There are two old coaching inns in the High Street: the 14th-century George and the White Hart. In the picture an old-style touring caravan hitched up to its towing car waits at the roadside.
The first School building was constructed not too far from the church in what was to become Academy Street.
Above the third vehicle, making its way down the High Street towards the junction, is the sign of the original Harrow Inn, which was demolished in 1934 and replaced by the present building.
Nottingham University started in the city in 1881 on South Sherwood Street.
The photographer stood with his back to the impressive medieval castle motte to look across The Hollow into Borough Street and the town, with its excellent array of mainly 18th-century
The unprepossessing church of St Mary Magdalen by Henry Goddard (1813-99 - see St Andrew's, Countesthorpe) sits on the south side of the main street.
It is interesting to contrast the fine street light on the left with the vision of things to come on the right. Behind it is an appalling flat-roofed modern intrusion.
The hotel façade has not changed, but Boots have moved further along the High Street and the Halifax Bank has replaced Boots.
residence of successive members of one family: James Brooks came to Odiham in 1818 to join an attorney's partnership, and his descendants continued as solicitors in a purpose-built office in Church Street
We are looking along Chequer Street towards Honey Hill; the shape of the community has changed little.
The High Street served as the main thoroughfare until the bypass, first mooted before the war, was eventually built.
Most local needs could be found on Market Street, with its stone-fronted shops. Many of Shaw`s sturdy stone terraced houses had no bathrooms, and a tin bath is on sale on the left.
This view is looking north up Alderley Edge`s main shopping street, the little gardens in front of the premises can clearly be seen.
The photographer stood with his back to the impressive medieval castle motte to look across The Hollow into Borough Street and the town, with its excellent array of mainly 18th-century
It is interesting to contrast the fine street light on the left with the vision of things to come on the right. Behind it is an appalling flat-roofed modern intrusion.
It reinvented itself as a cloth-weaving town, and is today a quaint market town with narrow streets. The Elizabethan town hall is now the museum.
Our photograph shows the open market in New Market Street. Here we see the Market Hall (or House) from the rear, and we can also see the back of the Town Hall; its 20ft-high wall guards a courtyard.
This is the top of Market Street, adjacent to Piccadilly.
Market Street was notorious for traffic congestion even in the 1880s.
Places (385)
Photos (21808)
Memories (6666)
Books (1)
Maps (1622)