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 5,461 to 5,480.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
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Memories
10,344 memories found. Showing results 2,731 to 2,740.
My New House
We have just bought a cottage here in North End and I am immersing myself in the wonderful history of the place. It looks nearly the same as it did all those years ago. Does anyone know when these cottages were built? I am like a ...Read more
A memory of Higham Ferrers in 2009
Recollections Of Pitsea From 1941 Onwards
Born in Northlands Drive, Pitsea in 1938, my first recollection was aged 3 years when I remember being put to bed in a cot under the kitchen table during an air raid. We had an Andersen shelter in the garden ...Read more
A memory of Pitsea in 1940 by
Fire In The Health At Clarendon
I was a student at Clarendon between 1963 and 1966, and how I remember the Sunday evenings curled up before the fire listening to gospel and classical music before supper. Of course there were also the House evenings ...Read more
A memory of Abergele by
I Am Not A Beach Boy
I am not a beach boy, even though we share a name. (I have not worked out how to create paragraphs,so bear with me.) My parents moved to the Beach when I was about 11 years old (around 1953) to Beach Road. We lived in the ...Read more
A memory of Severn Beach in 1953 by
School House
My first memory is that my father's parents lived in the school house which is at the junction where the road forks to go into the village of Cumrew. William and Ann Thoburn, both born in 1878 and died in the 50’s. All of the boys ...Read more
A memory of Cumrew in 1952 by
Big House And A Dalek!!
Its 1965 and I'm a 5 year old boy living in Tonbridge. Now, there was or still is a large white house almost opposite a green near to where there used to be a cinema. Can anyone else remember this house, what it was (children's ...Read more
A memory of Rusthall by
Up The Wood
We had no TVs, and there was not much on the radios so we made our own entertainment. One activity was playing up the local wood. We had two woods close to East Howle. One was called the Side Wood and the other was known as the Middle ...Read more
A memory of East Howle in 1950 by
Netley Football Club
I was born in Netley Abbey in 1962. My dad and uncle were joint managers of Netley F.C. who had their ground at the rec down by the waterfront. I was only 11 when my uncle died and 12 years old when my dad died so the memories I ...Read more
A memory of Netley in 1970 by
Our First Visit To Eyam
My husband's family comes from the Derby area. Our son is very proud of his Derbyshire roots, and sought to buy a house close to Derby yet - if possble - in a village in the Peak District. He and his wife spent many days and ...Read more
A memory of Eyam by
Home
I was born in Grassington in March 1953, in a small cottage in a row of three on Chaple Street. They were known as the "Monkey Houses", as they are probably, still known today. By true locals anyway. My father was born at the town hall as ...Read more
A memory of Grassington in 1953 by
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Captions
6,914 captions found. Showing results 6,553 to 6,576.
The house seen here was built in c1840 by the Shaw family, who first owned the estate. In July 1929 the 423 acre park was turned over to the Boy Scouts for the world's first Scout Jamboree.
The first shop was in a house in South Street, and then new premises were found in Swan Street, to the left of the island site. As business grew, it moved in 1875 to this site in Bocking End.
In the distant centre can be seen a house named Fairholme, the home of William Panter, superintendent of the carriage works and a leading man in the early development of the new town.
Beverley's beers were certainly best at the Horse and Jockey (left) back in 1959. Now the village's oldest pub is almost the only remaining building in this picture.
Its style owes something to the Wentworth Estate to the south-west, where there are many houses in a similar style, but mostly better than this.
Horse-drawn ambulances, taxi cabs, flat wagons, and even a horse bus were used to convey the patients down to the new Royal Infirmary on Oxford Road.
Two extra stories were added to the chapel in 1836 and it became a private house, but in 1930 the structure was found to be unstable, and the chapel was returned to its original design.
The parish church of St Mary the Virgin (centre) with its lofty belfry tower stands beside Granary Cottage and Long House (left) that were attached to Manor Farm.
The house on the left is later in date than its neighbour, with its distinctive Sussex-style half- tiled elevations and attic rooms.
The Trossachs, overtopped by Ben Ledi and other high mountains, enclose the lake at the head: and those houses which we had seen before, with their cornfields sloping towards the water, stood very prettily
The 18th-century Tivoli Tavern (the white building, centre left), formerly the Globe, is still there, but the buildings on the left are no more, having being replaced by Devonshire House.
The other houses date from the late 19th century. They now face modern bungalows. Vann Road is to the west of the crossroads.
The shops on the near left, housing Browns, Percy's the confectioners and Rennie's opticians, are in a new building, but three doors along the bay- fronted upper storeys visible in the earlier photograph
In 1241 Henry used the castle to house Welsh prisoners, and in 1303 it was upgraded as part of a series of second-line defences against Welsh attacks.
The town is situated on one of Norfolk's rare hills, and some early houses had wells dug 105ft deep to obtain water.
The Manor House, far right, dates from 1743; the original owner was Elenor Ellis.
The trees have gone, and the field to the right is now occupied by 1970s houses, Southerden Close.
Horse-drawn ambulances, taxi cabs, flat wagons, and even a horse bus were used to convey the patients down to the new Royal Infirmary on Oxford Road.
Sailing was one of the favourite pastimes of the wealthy late 19th-century 'off-comers' who built houses close to the shore of the lake.
These 'Old Houses' are in The Bury. The black door on the left of the early 16th-century Cottage in The Bury has 'John Hellis Builder' inscribed on it.
The Apex stands in the fork of the junction between the High Street and Church Street, both of which lead down to old landing stages on the Great Ouse. Today, little has changed.
Motor-cars have replaced the horse-drawn carriages, and the Quadrant Motors sign on the left indicates the entrance to a yard behind the shops where maintenance and repairs were carried out.
Rye is rich in medieval houses and quaint streets; the Landgate is the only surviving town gate of the original four; dating from 1329 or 1381, it had a portcullis and a drawbridge, and is a most imposing
Probably its most attractive artefact is the building itself, which was constructed in the early 16th century: the Town House was owned by Westminster Abbey and later by St John's College, Cambridge, and
Places (80)
Photos (6747)
Memories (10344)
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Maps (370)