Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chatsworth House, Derbyshire
- Osborne House, Isle of Wight
- Brambletye House, Sussex
- Ickworth House, Suffolk
- Kingston Lacy House, Dorset
- Boscobel House, Shropshire
- Preshute House, Wiltshire
- Bolton Houses, Lancashire
- Brick Houses, Yorkshire
- Quaking Houses, Durham
- Water Houses, Yorkshire
- Bottom House, Staffordshire
- New House, Kent
- Mite Houses, Cumbria
- Lyneham House, Devon
- Church Houses, Yorkshire
- Dye House, Northumberland
- Spittal Houses, Yorkshire
- Street Houses, Yorkshire
- Tow House, Northumberland
- Halfway House, Shropshire
- Halfway Houses, Kent
- High Houses, Essex
- Flush House, Yorkshire
- White House, Suffolk
- Wood House, Lancashire
- Bank Houses, Lancashire
- Lower House, Cheshire
- Marsh Houses, Lancashire
- Chapel House, Lancashire
- Close House, Durham
- Guard House, Yorkshire
- Hundle Houses, Lincolnshire
- Hundred House, Powys
- Thorley Houses, Hertfordshire
- School House, Dorset
Photos
6,747 photos found. Showing results 5,121 to 5,140.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
10,363 memories found. Showing results 2,561 to 2,570.
My Memories Of Windhill
I was born on Woodville Street in 1945 and can remember all the back to back houses and all the shops below the parish church down to the bottom of Carr Lane, Annie Dawson's, the Co-op, Traveller's Rest ...Read more
A memory of Windhill in 1945 by
Redhill, Market Hall 1915
Like the young cool girl who remembers the Hollies at the Market Hall on a Saturday night, I too found live music there. I think me and a school mate (from Radnor House School for boys) called Hank Jell, so named after Hank ...Read more
A memory of Redhill in 1962 by
Growing Up In Brighton Road
I remember my happy childhood in Brighton Road so well. We lived at 114, heading toward the Portsmouth road. My grandfather had built the house. It lay back from the road. Mr and Mrs Harper ran the paper shop that had ...Read more
A memory of Surbiton in 1952
Climbing To The Top
Climbing to the top. My friend Ray and I were going to see 'The Fugitive Kind' at the Odeon Cinema, Hounslow West. This was in 1960 and we were fourteen years old. I told him that my eldest brother had climbed to the top of ...Read more
A memory of Hounslow in 1960 by
Evacuation From London To Harpley
I remember Harpley as a four-year-old, when it had no running water, electricity or gas. I was evacuated there when first born, in 1939 during the war years and stayed in a cottage opposite to the village ...Read more
A memory of Harpley in 1940 by
Shenstone Training College
Bromsgrove Teacher Training College's proper name was Shenstone Teacher Training College and was under the aegis of Birmingham University. Shenstone was originally situated on the old prisoner of war camp outside ...Read more
A memory of Bromsgrove in 1963 by
Barbaraville My Childhood Home
I was born and brought up in Barbaraville, spending the first 27 years of my life there before moving to Inverness. I will always remember it as an idyllic place to grow up in.. Many a happy hour was spent ...Read more
A memory of Barbaraville in 1970
St Fagans
I was so pleased to find these photos of the gardens, as there don't seem to be very many around. My grandfather Trevor Dimond was the head gardener there. He started just after the war and was there for 30 years and boy, did he and his ...Read more
A memory of Wenvoe by
Glanaman Square
Further to previous postings this photograph is of Glanaman square taken from near the front of Bryn Seion chapel where the pelican crossing is now. The first shop, with awning, is now the chemists - then ran by Hubert Jones. The ...Read more
A memory of Glanaman in 1978 by
The Lane Pauline Johnson
I used to walk to Blands School through the lane with my friend Jean Brookes, we would often stop outside the Clark's (Terry) house and climb up the bank where we could see Jean's house across the field. Then we would ...Read more
A memory of Burghfield in 1955 by
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Captions
6,914 captions found. Showing results 6,145 to 6,168.
We are looking north along the High Street, with the school of 1849 on the far right, converted to a house in 1969.
The view looks at St Mary's from the north, along a varied terrace of possibly late 18th- and 19th- century houses which are not enhanced by the long brick boundary wall.
It is distinctive in that its porch, with its upper room and flanking round tower, would look more at home on a fortified manor house.
Down Commercial Street is the Market House, with a clock tower built by John Francis Basset in 1866. The Bassets of Tehidy were important mineral lords in this once-great copper and tin mining centre.
The town was very popular as a health resort in the mid-18th century, which resulted in many fine terraces of houses springing up. Children crowd the foreground.
This is Main Road, and it is full of local limestone-built houses. Originally it was the Great North Road, and had numerous inns.
Note that one of the cinemas, the Picture House, has given way to Fine Fare (centre right).
The buildings survive, but they were Tudorised and given leaded light windows and applied timber-framing: you could be forgiven for driving past and thinking it a 1920s period-style road house pub.
The nearby Sheffield Park estate built the modern mock half-timbered houses at the end of the street.
The challenge was met by new boarding houses, tall and each able to take in several families. They were built in rows.
This area was extensively rebuilt in the 1930s, when a tide of semi- detached housing swept across the fields.
This view, from the north, is across country- side, whereas today the foreground is occupied by housing and an industrial estate.
The second Lord Chesham, the son of the builder of Latimer House, was a Brigadier-General in the Boer War and the obelisk is a memorial to the men who served in that war.
All Saints' church stands like a watchtower over this street, which houses many small businesses.
At one time said to be the site of the town house of the High Sheriff of Monmouthshire in the 16th century, the structure was almost certainly rebuilt during the 19th century.
The village pump has been taken away, but the old smithy (centre), later a hearse house, remains. St Mary's churchyard contains the original Bolder Stone.
The canal basin was later filled in, and is now a private garden; the canal warehouse, built in 1825, is now used for housing.
Although the smithy is now a private house, older villagers recall the First World War and how the blacksmith was recruited on one day a week to make horse shoes for the war effort.
When Lord Leverhulme, the Sunlight Soap king, bought Hall Barn and Great House Barn he had them renovated as public refreshment rooms.
The big change is the addition, in the lee of the hill, of a well-designed theatre block by Kenneth W Reed and Associates of Harrow, along with a number of equally well-designed houses.
Gone the row of cottages, probably only thirty years old when the photograph was taken, and now gone is the Red House, an 18th-century building behind its boundary wall, but out of sight to the extreme
Close to the buttress nearest the camera, W S Gilbert, of Gilbert and Sullivan fame, sleeps under the widespread wings of a white angel; Gilbert lived at Grimsdyke, a house by Norman Shaw, to the north
As the suburban semi-detached house with its timbering and Tudor detailing reflected the Englishman's home as his castle, so with the contemporary pubs.
Development began in around 1870 with the arrival of the Great Northern Railway, but it was the arrival of the Piccadilly Line in 1933 that produced mass housing.
Places (80)
Photos (6747)
Memories (10363)
Books (0)
Maps (370)