Maps

62 maps found.

1902, Mill Green Ref. RNC780198
1946, Mill Green Ref. NPO780198
1946, Mill Green Ref. NPO780202
1946, Mill Green Ref. NPO780207
1897, Mill Green Ref. RNE780197
1895, Mill Green Ref. RNE780200
1898, Mill Green Ref. RNE780205
1919, Mill Green Ref. POP780200
1920, Mill Green Ref. POP780202
1947, Mill Green Ref. NPO780197
1946, Mill Green Ref. NPO780203
1899, Mill Green Ref. RNE780198
1895, Mill Green Ref. RNE780202
1895, Mill Green Ref. HOSM53737
1899-1901, Mill Green Ref. RNC780205
1898-1901, Mill Green Ref. RNC780207
1921, Mill Green Ref. POP780207
1921, Mill Green Ref. POP780208
1902, Mill Green Ref. RNC780197
1898, Mill Green Ref. RNC780201

Books

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Memories

229 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.

Childhood In Addlestone

I have many memories of Addlestone having lived there from 1940 to 1964. My family lived in Bourneside Road, at the far end was Coxes Lock Mill and the mill pond. We knew almost everybody that lived on Bois Hall estate. I ...Read more

A memory of Addlestone by Jacqueline Parsons

Windsor Lanes And Garage

Uncle Phil managed this branch of Hartwells garage after managing the one on the Bath Road next to the White Horse. Before that it had been the site of Rogers (?) watermill, the millpond stretching behind up towards ...Read more

A memory of Cippenham in 1960 by Dave Hill

Personal Reflections

I was born in Sandleaze, Worton in 1957. I was brought up at 1 Mill Road near the Marston boundary. I remember many things about the village especially the Rose and Crown Pub and the Mill. I remember with pride the ...Read more

A memory of Worton by Teresa Lewis

Memories Of My Family

I was not born when my family lived in Kirkby Green but I have heard my mother tell a few stories of life there. She had a pet trout who lived in the Beck which ran past the back garden. She called him Peter and would go ...Read more

A memory of Kirkby Green by Gillian Emerton

Early Memories

My birth on 30 Nov 1946 at 34 Oldberry Road, Burnt Oak, is where it all started for me, but my mother & her parents moved into the house when it was built for the LCC. She's 89 now, but recalls that she, as a 9-yr-old in 1928, ...Read more

A memory of Burnt Oak in 1946 by Anthony Kerrison

My Grandfather

I was born in 1953 and my Grandfather was already dead. His name was William Bowe and he was the last mill keeper at Hall Mill, although his son John, my uncle, ran a joinery business for a few years from there. Billy Bowe was the ...Read more

A memory of Workington in 1953 by Peter Findley

Number 2 Montague  Terrace

Barbara Brian.  I loved reading your memories of Montague Terrace and I thank you for them. Were you the young Miss Andrews that rode that posh bicycle and lived behind the shop and did your dad at times teach tap ...Read more

A memory of Bishopstoke in 1930 by Frederick Cannock

Mill Street Clowne. 1950

The gentleman pushing a cart in the foreground of this picture is my grandfather, Ernest Pearce (1895-1970). The cart was used to transport bundles of sticks that he cut for sale as firewood. They were sold for 4d a bundle. ...Read more

A memory of Clowne in 1950 by June Harvey

My Grandparents

My grandparents come from Elsecar and Wentworth, in Mill Lane, you may have seen the Roundhouse,Can`t miss it really just up from Pondside. When my real grandad died my grandmother remarried a man named Stanley Horn from Harley. ...Read more

A memory of Elsecar in 1952 by Susan Sutton

1951 1979 Life In Aldbrough St John

Reading Carol's memories brings to mind a lot of happy times in the village, especially the bus shelter and phone box. We managed to make up a lot of our own entertainment, especially the 'village youth ...Read more

A memory of Aldbrough St John in 1972 by Jeff Auton

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Captions

46 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.

Caption For Bellerby, The Village 1929

Just north of Leyburn is this fine village complete with a large green.

Caption For Westleton, The Village Sign C1965

Situated at the northern top of the green is the metal sign, showing a tower mill. It was erected by the Westleton Carnival Committee in 1963.

Caption For Brompton, Cockpit Hill C1960

This village has three greens.

Caption For High Wycombe, Marsh Green Mill 1906

Taken east of Bassetsbury, this view looks across the mill pond (now filled in) to Marsh Green Mill, first mentioned in 1759, but probably much earlier.

Caption For Saxtead, Windmill C1955

This post mill ceased working in 1947, but its fabric and machinery are maintained by English Heritage. It is thought that a mill has stood here for 700 years.

Caption For Ossett, The Green C1955

The Green Congregational Chapel replaced an earlier one near to the Kings Mills.

Caption For West Witton, The Duck Pond 1911

The stream ran down from Pen Hill through this pond to provide motive power for the corn mill over the road and below the Heifer Inn.

Caption For Long Melford, Hall Street C1955

This photograph shows Little Green with Hall Water Mill on the left side. The name Melford probably derived from 'mill on the ford'.

Caption For Skidby, Church Walk C1955

Around the village green stands this collection of cottages leading back to St Michael's Church (1552). There has been milling here in the village since the 14th century.

Caption For Harlow, High Street 1903

The eight daily coaches would have passed the Bull and Horseshoes at Potter Street, the Queen's Head at Churchgate Street, the Green Man at Mulberry Green and the George at the end of the High Street.

Caption For Lytham, The Windmill And Lifeboat Station C1955

Part of this mill's old machinery was transferred to the windmill at Wrea Green.

Caption For Crakehall, The Hall 1900

On the east side of the 5-acre village green, now used for cricket matches, is the Hall, built in 1732. It was the country seat of the Duke of Leeds, who lived at Kiveton Park in south Yorkshire.

Caption For Crakehall, The Village 1900

Crakehall, 1 mile north of Bedale, is two villages in one - this is Little Crakehall, with its race (left) for three corn and flax mills.

Caption For Aldeburgh, Mill House 1909

This is Fort Green Mill. It has a brick tower which once had four patent sails and a fantail. It was converted to a private house in 1902.

Caption For Bingley, From Altar Row 1894

The massive mill on the right, part of the Bowling Green complex, still stands, and is now used by Damart.

Caption For Wookey Hole, Car Park And Restaurant C1939

This is in essence the same building today; it is now painted white and green, with bigger windows and no veranda, surrounded by the car park.

Caption For Sabden, Wesleyan Church And Wesley Street C1960

It was only a mile away that George Fox, the Quaker, stood on the 'nick' of Pendle in 1652 and declared himself moved to start a religious order, the Society of Friends.

Caption For North Warnborough, Mill Corner C1955

Adjacent to the former King's Mill, the lane leads via the Green to the ford of the River Whitewater. From there a footpath leads to Odiham Castle.

Caption For Beccles, The River C1960

We are looking upstream, towards St Michael's Church, from the old quay; until the 1950s, Thames barges delivered grain here to Green's Mill.

Caption For Chartham, Village 1903

Chartham occupies a low-lying site about a large green. Here we see the River Stour flowing through the village. The river has at various times proved indispensable to local industry.

Caption For Elstead, Village 1906

The view looks north across this attractive village that is grouped around a small green. To the far left is Elstead Mill, once a worsted factory.

Caption For Dorking, Old Reigate Road 1906

Although yet early, the mill by the roadside is already at work, and the forge of the blacksmith's shop at the Reigate Road corner is in full blast.

Caption For Lytham, The Windmill And Lifeboat House 1907

Just behind it on the green stands the town's windmill, still a famous landmark. Sited to take full advantage of the winds blowing off the Irish Sea, it was built as a corn mill in about 1805.

Caption For Leicester, The Lake, Abbey Park C1955

What is there more pleasurable than to take a rowing boat out onto a picturesque, well-treed lake, to escape for an afternoon of peace and relaxation away from Leicester's factories and mills?