Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Places
3 places found.
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Photos
159 photos found. Showing results 221 to 159.
Maps
23 maps found.
Books
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Memories
1,468 memories found. Showing results 111 to 120.
Upbringing
I went to school first at Tondu infants and then to the Primary school, I remember when we had the school photographs taken in the play yard (where are they now?). I had a really great and happy childhood there living with all the ...Read more
A memory of Aberkenfig by
Relatives Buried At Rousdon Church
My great grandmother's sister Frances Ostler/nee Start (died 1889) is buried at Rousdon Church yard with her husband Luke Ostler (died 1916). They have a very strange looking memorial it is a long oak slab with ...Read more
A memory of Rousdon in 1880
Ormskirk
I was born in Ormskirk 1959, My parents were John & June Carr of Sephton Drive, we lived at number 21. I have five brothers. We attended West End, and Crosshall High School, My Grandfather Thomas Gabbitas lived near the Gas works in ...Read more
A memory of Ormskirk by
Mr Laidlaw
I read a post from STEVEN LAIDLAW asking if I/we remember his grandfather who owned a building company. Yes, Steven, I remember it well and I believe the entrance to his yard is still there in St. Albans Road, but I'm not sure. Mr ...Read more
A memory of High Barnet by
Schooldays
Billingham Campus School consisted of four halls - Bede, pictured in the foreground, Davy behind and Faraday furthest away. The fourth hall, Stephenson was about 800 yards away, not pictured. There was a sports block with a swimming pool which can just be seen to the left of this photograph.
A memory of Billingham in 1968 by
Brixham
Coming to Brixham from just outside of London as an 11 year-old was a real culture shock. New smells (fish!) new sounds (seagulls) and new faces (the inhabitants of the south west certainly have distinct facial features...to say nothing of ...Read more
A memory of Brixham in 1880 by
Happy Days In Thorne Park
Happy days in the paddling pool and on the swings, the old parkie taking your name for riding your bike in the park, what did he do with all the names? Remembrance Day in the park in 1963 as a cub, Mr Metcalf leading us. ...Read more
A memory of Thorne in 1962 by
On My Way Into Town Or To Visit My Friend Steve Flanagan
Having lived in the U.S now for 35 years this photo makes me very homesick as I haven't seen the old place since 1972! I remember walking down Lord Mayor's Walk and turning the corner next to ...Read more
A memory of York in 1962 by
The Marlborough
The white building in the picture below the church tower was the Marlborough pub. During the war through till the early 1950s my grandmother and grandfather were licencees and my father was brought up there. I have a picture of ...Read more
A memory of Charlbury in 1940 by
St Endellion Church
In this old and wonderful church I was baptised, went to Sunday school and was confirmed, and every time I enter it I am in awe and feel my ancesters all around me. Being born and brought up in Trelights, my mother was a ...Read more
A memory of St Endellion in 1940 by
Captions
442 captions found. Showing results 265 to 288.
Behind it now is the Brewhouse Yard Museum (of Nottingham life), opened in 1977, and the Angel Row Gallery, both housed in a row of brick houses of about 1680.
St Matthew's Church was built on a hillock a few hundred yards inland from Borth.
The bandstand, now relocated some yards away during recent pedestrianisation, was opened amid civic pomp in 1892.
Here we see workers leaving the Great Western Railway yard, which at one time employed 12,000 people. The sheer size of the building indicates the importance of the railway to the town.
At Hatfield it took five years to reach the Barnsley bed at 852 yards below the surface.
Nearby Amroth Castle is a grand 18th-century house that sits on the site of Amroth's original Norman fortress, just yards from Amroth beach.
The watch-tower in the roof of the new prison was built so the guards could observe all activity in the exercise yards.
The pump in the foreground, dating from 1796, is in what was the prison yard.
It has an overall length of 2,700 yards including approach viaducts. The tracks run across the bridge 150 feet above sea level.
Reached via a cobbled yard in front of The Three Daws pub, and visually obstructed by the high sea wall, the pier is somewhat run down, unlike the Royal Terrace Pier.
The street had many small inns for the market customers, built on plots in yards behind the street.
The Chalford Valley, with former woollen cloth mills every few hundred yards along its length, extends through Brimscombe into the distance.
Shipbuilding was also carried on here, the yard specialising in fishing vessels, tugboats and inland waterways craft. Because of the width of the river, vessels were launched sideways.
The street had many small inns for the market customers, built on plots in yards behind the street.
The pump in the foreground, dating from 1796, is in what was the prison yard.
The watch-tower in the roof of the new prison was built so the guards could observe all activity in the exercise yards.
The quay here was 300 yards long. The Victorian pier was built in 1896 and juts out 1,500 feet into the turbulent waters of the Menai Strait, stretching two-thirds of the distance to Anglesey.
The building was demolished to make an entrance to Lamb Yard.
The building was demolished to make an entrance to Lamb Yard.
Behind the tearoom, the village shop, now closed, was once an inn with stables and yard running back from the road.
Here, in Arguments Yard, the house on the right is derelict, the stone stairs have seen better days and the outside toilet looks ready to collapse.
The ornate façade of the Bull Hotel with its massive lanterns, on the right, conceals a Georgian galleried yard.
The ornate façade of the Bull Hotel with its massive lanterns, on the right, conceals a Georgian galleried yard.
Monuments to the brave officers who attempted to stem the trade in contraband still stand in the church yard: these are William Green, a customs officer, and Light Dragoon William Webb, who
Places (3)
Photos (159)
Memories (1468)
Books (0)
Maps (23)