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Maps
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Memories
1,784 memories found. Showing results 91 to 100.
Wilburton Primary School
This is the school I went to, and really enjoyed my time here. Mr. Gothard was the Headmaster. We also had a lovely Welsh teacher in the middle class, and I think Miss Yarrow took the little ones. (A very short walk ...Read more
A memory of Wilburton by
Life In Oxshott In 1940s And 50s Royal Kent School
I remember my first day at the Royal Kent School – 8th November 1948 – as recorded at entry no. 1450 in the school's original Admissions Register. It was a few weeks into the Autumn term, as in ...Read more
A memory of Oxshott by
Going To The Shops...
As a fully paid up member of the 'Baby Boomer' generation, born in 1947, I've been reading all the stories posted on this lovely website (which - like many others, I suspect - I came across purely by chance). I was born in Perivale ...Read more
A memory of Wembley by
Whetstone Hey Shops
I remember the triangle of shops at the top of Whetstone Hey in(1962), when I was about 7 years old. If you came up Whetstone Hey, from Valley Drive, on your left was Wartons Newsagents (what we called The Paper Shop). It ...Read more
A memory of Great Sutton by
Memories Of Ambleside And The Lakes
We as a family first stayed at Rothay Manor in Ambleside in 1953 and it was then that I had my first experiences in fell walking, trout fishing and negotiating the nearby "Stepping Stones" across the river ...Read more
A memory of Ambleside by
Memories Of Bexley Technical High School For Girls.
I was at this school from about 1961- 1966 after passing the 13+ exam. I went to Hall Place first, what a wonderful place it was! I remember Miss Moore who was the headmistress, we had Mrs. ...Read more
A memory of Bexleyheath by
Growing Up At Tombuie Cottage
My name is Drew Ramsay and my father retired from Calcutta India back home to Dundee in 1963 when I was 13 years old. He leased Tombuie Cottage for 5 years as a holiday home which came complete with a little over ...Read more
A memory of Tombuie Cottage by
Davidson Road School
Does anyone remember Davidson Road Secondary Modern School? This was late 1950's pre co-education days so although housed in the same building, girls were upstairs and boys downstairs. Seperate playgrounds and 'never the twain ...Read more
A memory of Croydon in 1958 by
Life In Burghfield In The 1950s
The passageway led from Clayhill Road all the way through the village, and came out on the Reading Road, some 2 miles away, the passageway was used by us children daily as a short cut to school, and it went ...Read more
A memory of Burghfield Common in 1955 by
West End
I was born on a not very pleasant day in February 1954! We lived in the Dunkirk area of the West End below the factory/mill on Dunkirk Lane. We had "The Green" to play on, Warley Road, and then the "Top Park" further up when we were a little ...Read more
A memory of Halifax by
Captions
1,058 captions found. Showing results 217 to 240.
In 1634, Charles I attempted to re-establish the Scottish Episcopal Church, and St Giles's was for a short period elevated to the status of a cathedral.
This short, 2-mile canal was opened in 1773, and is an extension of the River Ure.
Today, a short section behind the Theatre Royal is all that is left.
This short-lived railway, which opened in 1922, ran between Porthmadog and Dinas Junction, near Caernarvon, a journey which took two hours.
Only a short river, the Llinau rises about three miles upstream from the site shown here, before meeting the Tyfi.
The two Bittell Reservoirs, the Worcester and Birmingham Canal and some pleasant countryside are all just a short stroll away for the lane's residents.
Shortly after their construc- tion, the village's most famous son was born, William Dampier.
All Saints Church is an interesting one, with Anglo-Saxon 'long and short work' quoins to the nave and an Anglo-Saxon tower with an elaborate Norman west doorway and arcading.
Pilley is a short stroll from Boldre on an ancient route to the vast expanse of Beaulieu Heath.
Owing to inadequate foundations, the tower of St John's showed signs of stress shortly after it was built in 1420.
The village itself is rather a tale of two halves: this area around the former village green has the shops, and the other half, a short distance away, is focused on the church.
The first was during the building of the seafront at Torquay, when sand dredged from the river was landed here; and the second was in the 1970s, when for a short time Browse Brothers' fleet used the
Shortly afterwards the bandstand was removed to this spot from its position on the promenade.
The River Sid starts its short journey to the sea amidst the high land at Broad Down and Farway; here the Bronze Age inhabitants of East Devon buried their dead.
Its former watermill, also partly Tudor, is approached down a short leafy lane and has in recent years been carefully restored.
A car passes up the High Street, while a horse-drawn conveyance comes down the hill.Wright's Garage, on the right, emphasises that shortly after the First World War the internal combustion engine had
The MV 'Coronia' - famed for its part in the 'Little Ships' rescue of the British Expeditionary Force from Dunkirk in 1940 - returns to port.
In its day, Grimsby was the biggest fishing port in the world.
In its day, Grimsby was the biggest fishing port in the world.
Today, the east promenade overlooks the new Ramsgate Port.
The woman's short-skirted summer dress and cloche hat are typical of the early 1930s.
Shortly after they had left, a troop of Royal Dragoons arrived in the town.
This picture was taken shortly after the opening on 2 March 1908; the locomotive could be the 'Lord St Levan'.
The main body of Salisbury Cathedral was completed in a short span of forty years between 1220 and 1260, so the interior has an impressive architectural unity.
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