Places
4 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2 photos found. Showing results 461 to 2.
Maps
65 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
4,583 memories found. Showing results 231 to 240.
Happy Summers
I was born and bred in Gravesend. This photo brings back many memories of summer days down the prom! We always came here with my mum. She used to leave us and our cousins in the park behind the cafe whilst they went shopping in town. ...Read more
A memory of Gravesend in 1969 by
Staying In The Manor Hotel On Holiday
When I was 12 years old my family came to Mundesley for the first time. We stayed in the Manor Hotel. It was me, my brother, mother and father and my lovely grannie. I remember loving my stay here, the food ...Read more
A memory of Mundesley by
Knickerbocker Glories At The Pier Cafe
My memory often takes me back to the early 50’s when l was a pupil at Saltburn High School but earlier than that l recall being taken to the cafe at Saltburn pier which had Lloyd loom chairs and ...Read more
A memory of Saltburn-By-The-Sea by
America Woods
I lived in the house called Abbotsford in about 1934 which to this day, stands by the side of the America Woods. Once a year, the scouts would camp in the field at the back of the house. I spent many happy times playing in those ...Read more
A memory of Shanklin by
Chance Finding Hotel Atlanta, Tintagel
I have discovered that this hotel, Hotel Atlanta, Tintagel, was owned by my 2nd cousin twice removed on my maternal side of the family circ. 1950's/1960's. Mr Cyril and Mrs Grace Ayles are my ancestors. I ...Read more
A memory of Tintagel by
The Bungalow
I lived in New Malden until my early 20s. We lived in Connaught Road, Number 20 and then Number 21. Our final home was The Bungalow 164 Kingston Road. My mother was a keen gardener and we used to have masses of daffodils. My sister and ...Read more
A memory of New Malden by
Elmdon Airport 1939 Onwards
These early memories were passed down to me by my grandparents (Bridgwater) who lived in Elmdon House Farm from 1936. Two of their sons worked on the building of the airport and I believe some of the workers ...Read more
A memory of Elmdon by
Going To The Shops...
As a fully paid up member of the 'Baby Boomer' generation, born in 1947, I've been reading all the stories posted on this lovely website (which - like many others, I suspect - I came across purely by chance). I was born in Perivale ...Read more
A memory of Wembley by
Whetstone Hey Shops
I remember the triangle of shops at the top of Whetstone Hey in(1962), when I was about 7 years old. If you came up Whetstone Hey, from Valley Drive, on your left was Wartons Newsagents (what we called The Paper Shop). It ...Read more
A memory of Great Sutton by
Oakbank 1954 55
Strange to read all the memories of Oakbank in the 50s which are so similar to mine! I remember being taken there by my mum and gran in August 1954, excited at the 40-mile bus journey but then downcast at realising I would not be on the ...Read more
A memory of Seal by
Captions
914 captions found. Showing results 553 to 576.
A tablet on the Pier commemorates nine seamen of Margate lost in 1857 when the 'Victory', a lugger, went to the assistance of the American vessel 'Northern Belle', which came ashore on the Foreness
Until the 1540s, much of the church`s revenue came from its troupe of resident players, who put on shows at Christmas, May Day and Corpus Christi.
Dickens, Carlyle, Gladstone and Florence Nightingale all came to Malvern to 'take the cure'.
Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine were crowned in the Cathedral, King John is buried there and his son Henry III came in great state for the re-dedication of the building.
Under a stone in the chancel is the body of John Saintpyere, who was rector here before the Armada came.
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.
Many of Odiham's houses are a mixture of Georgian and Tudor; some are timber-framed, which was common before local bricks came into general use in the 18th century.
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
Now owned by the National Trust, Waddesdon Manor is a massive French chateau deposited on a windswept hilltop for Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild, famed for its superb porcelain collection, fittings
Now owned by the National Trust, Waddesdon Manor is a massive French chateau deposited on a windswept hilltop for Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild, famed for its superb porcelain collection, fittings
Nationally, coupés and tourers outnumbered saloons by about seven to one, and they appear to be doing the same in Southport. The Prince of Wales Hotel was built on Lord Street in 1876.
Much of 18th-century Stamford's trade came from its location on the Great North Road, and it had numerous coaching inns.
In the early years of the 19th century the impoverished Duke of Kent came to live at Woolbrook Glen.
Taking its name from the wife of Edward VII, the park was officially opened on 25 June 1902 – the date scheduled (but not kept) for his coronation.
The Brays came and gave the place its name in 1490. Sir Reginald became Treasurer of England, being involved in building Henry VII's chapel in Westminster Abbey.
Inside, Bedford's chief historical treasure is the brass to Sir William Harpur and his wife, Dame Alice. He is in the gown of an Alderman, and he was a Lord Mayor of London.
Its name came from Peter Hesketh's uncle, Bold Fleetwood Hesketh. As time went on, Peter, the founder of the town, assumed the additional name of Fleetwood.
In the opposite corner is the village school founded by the gift of £180 from a tailor, James Thistleton.
Overton is situated near the Lune Estuary; it is said that a terrace on the main village street uses stone that came from Cockersand Abbey. Of the abbey, only the chapterhouse remains.
All this came to an end with a disastrous fire, and the site is now a pub garden to the Nag's Head with a children's playground.
Each weighs about thirty tons - they possibly came from the quarries at Knaresborough.
Samuel Pepys studied here between 1650 and 1653, and on his death in 1703 his library came here, including the original manuscript volumes of his famous diaries.
Grain and produce came up river from East Yorkshire, while coal, glass products, and minerals were sent from here both to London and the continent.
Places (4)
Photos (2)
Memories (4583)
Books (0)
Maps (65)