Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- New Row, Dyfed
- Forest Row, Sussex
- Chigwell Row, Essex
- Low Row, Yorkshire
- Middleton One Row, Durham
- Red Row, Northumberland
- Collier Row, Essex
- Stoke Row, Oxfordshire
- Row, Cumbria (near Kendal)
- Row, Cornwall
- Row, Cumbria (near Langwathby)
- Authorpe Row, Lincolnshire
- Corner Row, Lancashire
- Medhurst Row, Kent
- Spooner Row, Norfolk
- The Rowe, Staffordshire
- Tittle Row, Berkshire
- Winkfield Row, Berkshire
- Higher Row, Dorset
- Heather Row, Hampshire
- Helmington Row, Durham
- Rotten Row, Berkshire
- North Row, Cumbria
- Alder Row, Somerset
- Frost Row, Norfolk
- Smokey Row, Buckinghamshire
- Shiplake Row, Oxfordshire
- Row Green, Essex
- Row Heath, Essex
- West Row, Suffolk
- Tottenhill Row, Norfolk
- Will Row, Lincolnshire
- Ulcat Row, Cumbria
- Billy Row, Durham
- Beck Row, Suffolk
- Broadland Row, Sussex
Photos
95 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
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Books
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Memories
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Captions
11 captions found. Showing results 1 to 11.
By now, the High Street was crammed with houses: all the plots had been filled.
Rowing and paddle boats were a common sight on the upper lake from the 1930s through to the 1970s.
St Peter Street had several rows of cottages, some in great dilapidation, occupied by river workers such as ferrymen, bargees and wharfingers.
No riverside town would be complete without a rowing club, and Twickenham Rowing Club was founded in 1860.
This row of three cottages is in Church Street.
At the time of this photograph, the prospect from the Pleasure Gardens then allowed a view of the fairly new Parish Church, but other buildings now obstruct it.
At the end of Middle Row stands the house and shop (1877) of George Bailye, tailor and hairdresser.
The complex was built on a site previously occupied by a row of cottages adjacent to Cambridge Hall, and opened in 1878 having cost around £14,000.
Two of the responds have a very elementary row of flat leaves.
It was rebuilt in a military style, and in the towers are cross- crosslets from which cross-bow shafts could be discharged.
Each of the houses shows a differing style, with dormers, gables and bow windows.
Places (93)
Photos (95)
Memories (0)
Books (0)
Maps (0)