Places
23 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chalfont St Peter, Buckinghamshire
- St Peters, Kent
- Weasenham St Peter, Norfolk
- Burgh St Peter, Norfolk
- Peter Tavy, Devon
- Walpole St Peter, Norfolk
- Ampney St Peter, Gloucestershire
- Peter's Finger, Devon
- Peters Marland, Devon
- St Peter's, Gloucestershire
- Peters Green, Hertfordshire
- Saltfleetby St Peter, Lincolnshire
- Thorpe St Peter, Lincolnshire
- Toynton St Peter, Lincolnshire
- St Peter's, Tyne and Wear
- St Peter South Elmham, Suffolk
- Ayot St Peter, Hertfordshire
- Carleton St Peter, Norfolk
- Charlton St Peter, Wiltshire
- Fugglestone St Peter, Wiltshire
- Rockland St Peter, Norfolk
- Wiggenhall St Peter, Norfolk
- St Peter The Great, Hereford & Worcester
Photos
1,748 photos found. Showing results 241 to 260.
Maps
122 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,304 memories found. Showing results 121 to 130.
Hawthorn Box Fields
Pat - it's lovely to read about Hawthorn as my grandmother Mrs Berrett and my Uncle Peter and Aunt Hilda Evans also lived there. School holidays were spent picking blackberries at the old D.P camp and playing in the ...Read more
A memory of Hawthorn in 1955 by
Kennards
Theses photos have certainly brought back so many memories, how great to see it all as remembered, but to bring it all back correctly - the mind changes things! I loved Kennards - the smell and the sounds of that arcade will always live ...Read more
A memory of Croydon in 1955 by
Bankil's Ironmonger
Bankil's of Woodford Bridge was my uncle's shop. The two men in brown coats were 'Hock' and Dick Chinnery. My uncle was John Banks. My father Brian and brother Peter also worked there for short periods of time on ...Read more
A memory of Woodford Bridge in 1960 by
The High Street Sayer's Store 'nim' And Phyl Alen
My name is Barbara Tester and I live in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. My beloved (late) husband, Brian Tester, was born on 26th July, 1930 at No. 1 Station Cottages, 1 Station Road, Ardingly. His ...Read more
A memory of Ardingly in 1958 by
Kings Builders
I started school in Smallfield in 1934. In those days there were bucket lavatories. The sewer was laid in 1938 and then most of Smallfield was able to do away with the buckets. There were 3 teachers, Miss Kempshall who came from ...Read more
A memory of Smallfield in 1945 by
Ww2
I was evacuated to some wooden bungalows in Goring Road and lived with Percy and Renee Bonner. Renee's relations were Romany gypsies who lived in Woodcote. The photo shows The White Lion and the village shop which I believe was "Pointers ...Read more
A memory of Woodcote in 1940 by
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
The Waltham Abbey Choir And Other Memories
My family lived in Waltham Abbey from 1955 to 1961 and living there left a lasting impression on me. I attended Waltham Holy Cross County Primary School during this time and at the ripe old age of 8 ...Read more
A memory of Waltham Abbey in 1960 by
Cloch Lighthouse
My father Peter Gordon, was born in the Cloch lighthouse as his father was principle lighthouse keeper at the time. He used to tell me he jumped out of his bedroom window and go for swim. I was born in London and only once managed ...Read more
A memory of Gourock by
Summer Of 67
I won the Cornish longboard championships at Constantine Bay in 1967. I was the profesional lifeguard at Treyarnon Bay in 1967 and 1968. Friendships established then and still true include Anhtony Richards, Robert Ede, David ...Read more
A memory of Constantine Bay in 1967 by
Captions
474 captions found. Showing results 289 to 312.
In the background we can see the tower and spire of the 12th- and 14th-century parish church of St Peter and St Paul, which has interior wall-paintings dating from the 15th century.
St Peter's Church is now redundant.
In the centre foreground of the picture stands St Peter's church, intact at this time, built out of locally quarried Triassic red sandstone and identified by its unusual helm-roof tower.
The dominant feature is the Norman St Peter's Church presiding over this view.
On the right, a car is parked in front of listed railings belonging to St Peter's and St Mary's junior school.
They depict St Paul and St Peter.
Our tour of Aylesbury peters out amid the post-war expansion to accommodate London's overspill.
It lasted long after the passenger service was withdrawn, carrying coal to Yelland Power Station and ball clay from Peters Marland.
The avenue leads to the superb west tower of Saints Peter and Paul church.
Clacton was the brainchild of one man—Peter Bruff, an engineer with the Tendring Hundred railway company—who bought 50 acres of farmland here in 1865 with a view to its development as a holiday resort
The first links with the Raleigh family, from which the village now takes the second part of its name, came in 1346 when Peter de Raleghe owned certain manorial rights.
This village lies around a green, and here the church of St Peter and St Paul can be found.
The tower of the church of St Peter was rebuilt in the 18th century after the previous one fell down.
The church of St Peter and St Paul has many cast iron graveslabs in the floor.
Theirs may be more famous, but St Peter's has quite a pronounced twist.
On the right is St Peter's, the parish church of Blaenavon, built by the ironmasters Hopkins and Hill in 1805.
The tower of St Peter's church can just be seen above the roofs on the right-hand side of the picture.
The George Hotel replaced the earlier George Inn, which was re-erected in St Peter's Street in 1852.
The grammar school moved out of its old buildings (now the Town Hall) to a new twenty-acre site set in fields north of St Peter's church in 1891.
St Peter's 13th-century church was rebuilt in 1870.
The Church and War Memorial c1955 Dedicated to St Peter & St Paul, the church here is first mentioned in 1310, though there was almost certainly a place of worship on the site in late Saxon times
The village shop (right) was run by Pamela and Peter Mills, and his green Standard van is parked outside.
Our vantage point for this view is near to St Peter's Church, whose construction in the late 1920s made use of stone recycled from the defunct Cyfarthfa iron works.
St Peter's in Kirkgate was noted for its 15th-century brasses, whilst 18th-century Holy Trinity in Boar Lane had perhaps the most attractive-looking spire in the area.
Places (23)
Photos (1748)
Memories (1304)
Books (0)
Maps (122)