Maps

711 maps found.

1923, Cerrig Llwydion Ref. POP665906
1922, Bryn Ref. POP653609
1947, Baglan Ref. NPO630332
1922, Ynysygwas Ref. POP876165
1947, Abergwynfi Ref. NPO618729
1900-1901, Morfa Glas Ref. RNC783787
1900-1901, Dyffryn Cellwen Ref. RNC696160
1923, Lower Brynamman Ref. POP768851
1923, Neath Ref. POP788161
1923, Melincourt Ref. POP777838
1922, Margam Ref. POP774552
1923, Onllwyn Ref. POP797665
1947, Gwaun-Leision Ref. NPO723838
1947, Morfa Glas Ref. NPO783787
1947, Mount Pleasant Ref. NPO784938
1947, Neath Ref. NPO788161
1947, Sandfields Ref. NPO824964
1947, Seven Sisters Ref. NPO827764
1947, Trebanos Ref. NPO851666
1898, Melincryddan Ref. RNE777839

Books

5 books found. Showing results 217 to 5.

Memories

301 memories found. Showing results 91 to 100.

When I Was A Lad....

Ahh.. What a rush of memories return to my mind as I ponder the view of the vale of Almondsbury laid out before me. I grew up in the lower village (then known as marshwell crescent). My father's family hailed from the deepest ...Read more

A memory of Almondsbury in 1955 by Alan Jarman

Nights Out In Consett

I have some wonderful memories of nights out in Consett in the sixties. There was a pub called the Masons Arms run by Kevin and Ina Kearney and the barmaid Jenny, I think. It served the most beautiful beer in the world or so ...Read more

A memory of Consett in 1966 by Michael Smyth

Them Were The Days

My family (Isaac..Reg, Lilian, June, Pat, aunty Mary, uncle Denny, and cousins Andrew and Mark and Grandad Isaac) used to holiday in this hotel each year from about 1968 to 1975. I have some wonderful childhood memories of ...Read more

A memory of Torquay in 1971 by Patricia Piper

Visit To Blarney Cork 2007

My ancestors came from Cork to England. Whether this means that they sailed from Cork Harbour during the 1850's, or whether they lived in Cork, I am not sure, however my husband and I had an enjoyable few days there this ...Read more

A memory of Blarney in 2007 by Susan Winwood

Liverpool Pilots

Fond memories of going to Amlwch Port to play as children and walking along Llancarw to Llaneilian with two or three younger children tagging along with us, and waving to the pilots as they moored outside Almwch Port.

A memory of Amlwch in 1957 by Margret Hall

Chester In The 1960s And 1970s

Chester for me, in the 1960s, was, first, the Museum.  It was a full day out.  The C4 or C3 bus from Overpool or the C6 from Rivacre, small pack of sandwiches and some orange squash in my school haversack and I could ...Read more

A memory of Chester in 1964 by Stephen Owen

Beautiful In All Seasons

This road, as the word Brook Street most clearly implies, leads down from the Cross in the distance at the top of the hill down through this avenue of trees to the Lynch. On the left are some beautiful houses with lawns and ...Read more

A memory of Eastry by Michael Mitchell

Growing Up

I was born on the 24th of July 1929 above a shop next to a pub called the Rose of Denmark, in Hotwells, Bristol, very convenient for Father to wet his whistle and my head at the same time. Father was born in 1893, Mother in 1895. They ...Read more

A memory of Bristol in 1930 by Arthur Cottrell

The N.H.S. Early Years To Retirement

The Transport Department at Southmead Hospital when I joined them consisted of an officer, foreman, and four porter drivers, with two buses, three vans, and two cars. We were responsible for ...Read more

A memory of Bristol in 1960 by Arthur Cottrell

My Home Town

I grew up in Ellesmere Port. My parents, me, my brother and sister migrated to Australia in 1960. I used to go to MIlton Road Primary School. I lived in St. Andrews Road and I would love to know if these locations still exist. I have fond memories of growing up there .

A memory of Ellesmere Port in 1951 by Denise Stefanaras

Captions

781 captions found. Showing results 217 to 240.

Caption For Teignmouth, Whale Bones 1922

These whale bones were brought to the town by a local trader, a reminder of Teignmouth's importance as a port.

Caption For Mevagissey, The Harbour C1955

Along with places like Looe, Polperro and St Ives, Mevagissey has long been a fishing port much loved by artists and visitors alike.

Caption For Gweek, The Village Green 1904

Situated at the very head of the tidal Helford River, Gweek was an important port for distributing goods to and from Helston and the surrounding district.

Caption For Padstow, The Harbour 1888

For many years Padstow was a bustling sole fishing port. Transatlantic passenger ships berthed here, many built in the town's own boat yards.

Caption For Bingley, Five Rise Locks, The Leeds & Liverpool Canal 1894

The canal was a vital link for Bingley's manufacturers with the port of Liverpool.

Caption For Charlestown, The Harbour 1912

The port was invariably busy, also with cargoes of coal and the sweet-smelling barrel-staves which made the casks for transporting the finer qualities of china clay.

Caption For Budleigh Salterton, Esplanade From West 1890

It was once a busy little port exporting salt (from which the town takes its name) and wool, but the estuary became silted up in the 15th century.

Caption For Market Drayton, High Street 1903

To eat ginger-bread correctly it should be cut into slices and dunked in a glass of port. Perhaps ginger-bread was sold by W Cushing, Provisions and Groceries.

Caption For Alfriston, Cuckmere Valley C1955

It is the only river mouth in Sussex on which no port has been built.

Caption For Lymington, High Street C1955

An important sailing centre, Lymington was originally a Saxon port, and there was shipbuilding here between the Norman era and the 18th century.

Caption For Port Isaac, 1895

They were loaded and unloaded either on foot or by horse and cart - a horse can be seen waiting at the port side of the vessel.

Caption For Winchelsea, The Armoury 1906

Winchelsea is an 'ancient' town, like Rye, equal in status to the Cinque Ports and having to provide a quota of ships for the English fleet.

Caption For Newhaven, Harbour From Hawthornden 1897

Founded in 1488 by King James III, this port was for many years a strong centre of Scottish ship building; also, up until the time of our photograph, it experienced a phenomenally

Caption For Irvine, The Harbour 1904

Caught in the mist, a row of masts on some fairly large sailing ships offers an indication of how important this port was to the turn of the century shipping and trade.

Caption For Cley, Windmill 1933

This picturesque flint village was once the most significant of the Glaven estuary ports, and its old Custom House bears testimony to its prestigious past.

Caption For Felixstowe, The Docks 1907

It was local landowner Colonel Tomline who promoted a railway and a new dock in Felixstowe, in the hope of being able to compete with the port of Harwich across the Orwell Estuary.

Caption For Bungay, River Waveney C1955

In the days when Bungay was a thriving port, trading wherries would come through Geldeston Lock near Beccles, and sail up the Waveney to what used to be the limit of navigation for large craft.

Caption For Port Navas, The Post Office C1960

On a creek on the north shore of the Helford, Port Navas was once the shipping place for granite from the quarries around Constantine.

Caption For Portland, Breakwater 1890

They were constructed in the second half of the 19th century to enhance the naval port that had developed over the previous centuries.

Caption For Tilbury, The Ferry C1960

The current Gravesend ferry sails from the right quay, and the harbour buildings are now the London International Cruise Terminal; the great modern container port that supplanted the London Docks are to

Caption For Botley, The Hambledon Hounds C1960

Botley, once a small inland port, stands at the head of navigation on the River Hamble, and barges travelled upstream for corn, coal and timber until the early 20th century.

Caption For Sharpness, The Training Ship Vindicatrix C1955

The lighters in the foreground were used to carry freight from Sharpness port to Gloucester.

Caption For Queenborough, The Slipway C1955

Queenborough gained its name in 1366, when Edward III gave the borough and port to his Queen Philippa. It once boasted a castle, but this was destroyed by Cromwell.

Caption For Gorleston, Brush Quay C1955

Gorleston developed as a fishing port and rival to Yarmouth across the estuary of the river Yare. It became part of Great Yarmouth in the early 19th century.