Places
26 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Town's End, Somerset
- Towns End, Dorset
- Town End, Derbyshire
- Town End, Buckinghamshire
- Town End, Merseyside
- Town End, Cambridgeshire
- Town's End, Buckinghamshire
- Bolton Town End, Lancashire
- West End Town, Northumberland
- Town End, Cumbria (near Grange-Over-Sands)
- Kearby Town End, Yorkshire
- Town End, Cumbria (near Bowness-On-Windermere)
- Town End, Yorkshire (near Huddersfield)
- Town End, Yorkshire (near Wilberfoss)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Appleby-in-Westmorland)
- Town's End, Dorset (near Melbury Osmond)
- Town's End, Dorset (near Swanage)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Ambleside)
- Town's End, Dorset (near Bere Regis)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Ambleside)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Lakeside)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Kirkby Lonsdale)
- West-end Town, South Glamorgan
- Townend, Derbyshire
- Townend, Strathclyde (near Dumbarton)
- Townend, Staffordshire (near Stone)
Photos
23 photos found. Showing results 1,581 to 23.
Maps
195 maps found.
Books
3 books found. Showing results 1,897 to 3.
Memories
3,714 memories found. Showing results 791 to 800.
Bude In The 1950s.
I remember the primary school and the little banks behind it which seemed huge to us then! We used to go mussel picking on the rocks and walk along the downs with buttercups and daisies, sadly now much reduced due to soil erosion. ...Read more
A memory of Bude in 1956 by
The Old Priory Estate Wall, Victoria Road
Hi, I was born in Dartford in 1967 and moved away in the mid 80's. Does anyone else know of the 'king and queen stones' as we called them. They where carved crowns in the walls of the old priory that ran ...Read more
A memory of Dartford by
My Uncle's Buthchers Stall Tunstall Market 1960s
I remember my late Uncle Norman Buckley, ( W Buckley & Sons Butchers ) and my late Auntie Irene, working tirelessly on their butcher's stall, always the busiest in Tunstall market !! The finest ...Read more
A memory of Tunstall in 1969 by
Home At Last
I had been coming to Chesterfield as a child from early 60s to visit family in Rhodes Ave Newbold from Glasgow and loved every minute especially summer holidays when my cousin Susan and I would come into town and straight to the ...Read more
A memory of Chesterfield by
Junior. Leaders
I arrived at Park Hall in October 1970 until May 1973, and much to my amusement left as the top Scottish Junior. It was the beginning of a perfect time and a wonderful life for many years. Those of us who arrived as callow youths ...Read more
A memory of Oswestry in 1970 by
The Routs
I lived in the routs in 1952 and when I was three moved to Routs View. I used to help out at Llanwern Park Farm; Garnet Baker was the farmer there at the time. There was lots of long huts at Underwood then, I expect left over from the ...Read more
A memory of Llanwern in 1952 by
New Bank
When I was a small child I was taken to my aunt and uncle's house at 59 New Bank, Halifax - this was a house over shops. The house was one up and down with gas lighting and a cellar and also an attic room (where visitors slept). I ...Read more
A memory of Halifax in 1952
Cwa Factory Or County Clothes, And Charlesworths Staff
My mother was Betty Brownell, nee Fleet. She started to work at the clothing factory when she was 12 and left to come to Australia in 1966. I remember going to the Christmas parties for the ...Read more
A memory of Crewe by
Brook Street
My memories of Brook Street from around 1955 through to 1969 are numerous. Schooling at University Place and Brook Street primary, junior and senior school which I left in 1963. From one end to the other I must have ...Read more
A memory of Northumberland Heath in 1957 by
Beautiful Hendon
Even though I was born a good ten-years after the second world war, Hendon was my home town. I loved it there. I attended Algernon Infant and Junior school, then onto St Mary's in the Downage. I always loved Hendon, but on a visit there ...Read more
A memory of Hendon
Captions
5,054 captions found. Showing results 1,897 to 1,920.
The international aspect of the town's trade can be seen by the sign outside Joseph Hird's grocery in the centre of the picture. It advertises him as a 'French and Italian Warehouseman'.
Ringwood's market brought country folk from far and wide to the town with their goods; it also became famous for the sale of New Forest ponies.
Here we see the narrow main street of this north Norfolk market town. The road sign on the left depicts a torch, and warns of a school just around the corner.
As a market town, Fakenham serves the needs of a wide area of villages and farms - as is suggested by the presence of the main national banks.
Hingham was an important market town in the Middle Ages.
The spectacular Market Cross was built in about 1600, replacing one burnt down in the major town fire of that year.
The Anglo-Saxons almost certainly fortified Wallingford, and there was once an important castle here, though little of it survives today.
This was the main road into St Austell from Truro and the west before the building of the ring road.
Victoria Park lies to the east of Newbury town centre and covers an area of seventeen acres.
Some of these were enlarged and used as dwellings until quite recent times. They are now the haunt of visitors, strolling out from the nearby towns.
The castle and the south-eastern approaches to the town present an illusion of island tranquillity, stretching from the wide waters of the Usk through the cattle-filled Castle Meadows to the wooded slopes
The lane to Cock Hall is in the foreground and Whitworth High School playing fields now occupy the large field, with the school having been built to the right.
In the days when trading wherries plied their way up and down the rivers, transporting goods from the sea ports, or from one town to another, Beccles was a thriving port.
The market place was once a good deal bigger than this, but fire swept through the town in 1679, and subsequent rebuilding encroached on the site.
The small rural hamlet of Corey's Mill, now completely absorbed into the New Town of Stevenage, was once dominated by its windmill, which burnt down in 1878.
From the height of Castle Hill, close to the old railway line on the east side of the valley, Bakewell looks exactly what it is: a pretty and compact market town.
Newton Abbot market has changed a great deal in both character and appearance since this photograph was taken in the 1920s.
This could be any town, anywhere, the epitome of the Borough Architects' brave new world of the early 1960s.
In the mid 18th century, improvements in navigation on the River Blyth led to a big improvement in trade for the area's maltsters and brewers. The Thoroughfare is Halesworth's main shopping street.
From there, the Kennet & Avon Canal plunges down 29 locks to the valley below. This one is on the edge of town, close to the old prison.
St Blazey is a modest town that sits inland from the port of Par in St Austell Bay.
The pool is an obvious source of enjoyment and pleasure for the mothers and children of the New Town in this summer scene.
Pevsner writes: 'The church is out of the way to the west of the High Street, and what is attractive as a setting is around it and has little do with the town'.
This small market town on the banks of the Sow was entitled to hold four annual fairs, mainly for the buying and selling of horses and cattle.They were held on Midlent Thursday, Holy Thursday, 5
Places (26)
Photos (23)
Memories (3714)
Books (3)
Maps (195)