Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Places
3 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
1,093 photos found. Showing results 61 to 80.
Maps
27 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
489 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.
Growing Up In The War Years In Prees & Whitchurch
Although I was born in Whitchurch [Bark Hill], we moved to Prees soon after. However, I was sent to stay with my grandmother most weekends and for a period I was sent to the Wesleyan school. My ...Read more
A memory of Whitchurch in 1940 by
Childhood Days
My mom, my brother and myself lived in Heath Street off Winson Green. I remember we had no hot water and no bathroom, so we had the tin bath in front of the fire. I remember the old washhouse where Monday was always washing day ...Read more
A memory of Winson Green in 1952
''the Grapevine'' And Others!
My uncle, the late William John Wilcox, was the proprietor of the 'Grapevine' from the mid 1930s through to the early 1960s. I remember it as a truly old fashioned 'pub' complete with a 'games room' with darts, shove ha'penny ...Read more
A memory of Meare in 1940 by
Childhood In Sparkbrook
I grew up in Elm Grove, Sydenham Road and went to Montgomery Street School. Does anyone remember the Waldorf Road cinema ? It was near the junction of Stratford Road. We used to go on a Saturday morning to see 'The Lone ...Read more
A memory of Sparkbrook in 1958
Thorne Water Sports
One of the highlights of the year was the annual Thorne Water Sports held in the canal between Dunston's shipyard and the Canal Tavern. The event included swimming races and sculling races where competitors stood in a rowing boat ...Read more
A memory of Thorne in 1948 by
Sunny 1950''s Sunday Mornings
I have many memories about the old St Mary's Church. Until I started thinking of them I realised that I have not got one involving a rainy day apart from when my Grandad was buried in the churchyard. He was laid ...Read more
A memory of Clayton-Le-Moors in 1954 by
Liffy
My father was supposed to go to work that day, April 14th 1970, the day of the Partington Manchester Ship Canal disaster. He travelled most days because his car was broken down. He managed to fix his car that day but he could have been part of ...Read more
A memory of Irlam in 2009 by
Boat Road, Barnton What Happened To The Houses?
Hello. I've just been looking at a picture of the canal and houses at Boat Road, Barnton. The photo was taken in the very early '50's and I was thinking what a lovely-looking 'canal village' it looked - ...Read more
A memory of Barnton in 1953 by
My Grandad Humphreys Thomas John1875 1965
Grandad Humphreys, he was a carpenter making and restoring the Lockgates on the Montgomery Canal. Born in Welshpool 1875-1965. I remember the little trains running across Church Street as a boy of 8 years ...Read more
A memory of Welshpool in 1954 by
Australians On The Cut 1975
Having left Australia on an open-ended working holiday to England in January, 1974 with my girlfriend, it was hard to imagine that within six weeks of arriving in London we'd be living on a leaky old narrow boat in ...Read more
A memory of Leighton Buzzard in 1975 by
Captions
713 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.
The Grand Western Canal was a 19th-century dream, planned to run from Taunton to the river Exe near Exeter.
Now derelict, the Thames & Severn Canal linked the two rivers. It was specially built to accommodate the elegant sailing barges called Severn trows. The canal closed in 1954.
The locks at Fleckney are a part of the descent of the canal from its high point at Foxton into the Soar Valley.
Looking West to the Diving Board Coate Water was originally constructed in 1821-22 as a reservoir, and was designed to overcome water shortages on the canal system around the town when
This peaceful view shows the Lancaster Canal as it passes through Bolton-le-Sands. The canal arrived here in 1797, and transformed the village into a town.
To increase the trade of the local estate, Charlotte Bethell, the wife of the lord of the manor, financed this three-mile long canal, which opened in 1802. 90-ton keelboats brought coal to Leven and returned
Half a mile north of New Mill is a complex of reservoirs; they were built by the Grand Junction Canal in the 1830s to store water for the Marsworth Flight of locks, whereby the canal descends from the
The canalised stretch of the River Chess was opened in 1803 for Samuel Salter to ferry barrels between his Rickmansworth and Uxbridge breweries via the Grand Junction Canal.
Created in 1790, this successful canal was built to ship Bedworth coal to the town of Coventry. At Hopwas, just beyond Tamworth, the canal threads its way through attractive wooded country.
One impressive feature of the Manchester Ship Canal was the Barton Aqueduct, designed by Edward Leader Williams.
The Oxford Canal, one of Britain's earliest inland waterways, took 20 years to complete and was finished in 1790.
A Moore resident keeps a look out for a rare commercial barge making its leisurely way along the Bridgewater Canal.
Thorne was already a busy market town when the Stainforth & Keadby Canal opened in 1802.The canal provided a link between the navigable rivers Trent and Don, and with its opening Thorne went on to
Thorne was already a busy market town when the Stainforth & Keadby Canal opened in 1802.
At Great Haywood Junction, the Trent & Mersey meet the Staffordshire & Worcester Canal.
From Bridge Street we head north towards Victoria Square over the Chesterfield Canal, whose bridge parapets are in the foreground.
In 1949 the New Basingstoke Canal Company bought the canal from the Harmsworth family, who had owned it since 1923.
The Birmingham & Fazerley Canal, completed in 1789, provided a more direct route for London-bound goods. It was a unique example of co-operation between canal companies.
However, the economic life of the canal was short-lived. From the 1840s the steam railways proved to be the death-knell of the canal era.
The Hope was one of the many inns and pubs that lined the course of the canal, at one time or another.
We are looking westwards along the Grand Union Canal on its way to Birmingham, at point where it originally joined the Oxford Canal.
The Grand Western Canal was a 19th- century dream, planned to run from Taunton to the River Exe near Exeter.
The Canal Wharf 1906 Completed in 1794, the Basingstoke Canal was originally planned to link London and Guildford with Southampton.
Before 1865 in Andover, coal had been unloaded on the canal basin quay.
Places (3)
Photos (1093)
Memories (489)
Books (0)
Maps (27)

