Places
32 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Royal Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire
- Kensington, Middlesex
- Chelsea, Middlesex
- Sloane Square, Middlesex
- Kensal Town, Middlesex
- Farnham Royal, Buckinghamshire
- Easton Royal, Wiltshire
- Hook Green, Kent (near Royal Tunbridge Wells)
- Tollard Royal, Wiltshire
- Studley Royal, Yorkshire
- Notting Hill, Middlesex
- Royal's Green, Cheshire
- Manor Royal, Sussex
- Mancot Royal, Clwyd
- Park Royal, Greater London
- Royal Oak, Durham
- Royal Oak, Lancashire
- Royal Oak, Yorkshire
- Royal British Legion Village, Kent
- Preston, Wiltshire (near Royal Wootton Bassett)
- Hawkenbury, Kent (near Royal Tunbridge Wells)
- Stone Cross, Kent (near Royal Tunbridge Wells)
- Lower Green, Kent (near Royal Tunbridge Wells)
- Green Hill, Wiltshire (near Royal Wootton Bassett)
- St John's, Kent (near Royal Tunbridge Wells)
- Lower Green, Kent (near Royal Tunbridge Wells)
- The Common, Wiltshire (near Royal Wootton Bassett)
- Park Corner, Sussex (near Royal Tunbridge Wells)
- West Kilburn, Middlesex
- Knightsbridge, Middlesex
- South Kensington, Middlesex
- North Kensington, Middlesex
Photos
1,326 photos found. Showing results 241 to 260.
Maps
158 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 289 to 2.
Memories
992 memories found. Showing results 121 to 130.
Childhood Memories
I was born in Hereford County Hospital in 1945 and together with my twin sister was bought back to Broad View, Llangrove where I lived with my Mum and Dad and older brother from 1945 until I got married in 1965. My Dad had ...Read more
A memory of Llangrove in 1950 by
Laurel Cottages
A few years ago, along with two of my daughters, I came to look for Laurel Cottages as my mother had lived there up to her death in September 1942. My mother, Mona Braithwaite, was a cook and lived at 9 Laurel Cottages. ...Read more
A memory of North Warnborough in 1940 by
Royal Soldiers Daughters School
I also remember Miss Betts and Miss Lloyd and her dog. Pat Weedon must have been there at the same time as me. I was then Linda Roberts number 61!
A memory of Hampstead in 1949 by
When I Joined The Royal Air Force 22nd May 1952
I attended the Presbyterian Church Rossett Primary School in Station Road before attending the new school near Tom Bishop's shop, where I first bought my first cigarettes, Willy Woodbines, 5 for a ...Read more
A memory of Rossett in 1952 by
Binbrook, The Holiday And Life.
Onwards and upwards through the years, I had an aunty and grandmother who lived there. Ending up at No2 Mount pleasant after living in Low Lane. Lilly and Bill Stone, parents of my mother Jaqueline Stone (now ...Read more
A memory of Binbrook in 1956 by
Mixed Memories
My family lived in and around South Ockendon for many years. I was born in 1965 in Romford. I went to Shaw County Primary School from aged 4, then to Lennards for years 1 and 2 finally at Culverhouse until I left school in ...Read more
A memory of South Ockendon by
Dereham Norfolk
I was born in Dereham, Muriel Secker, and lived in Cowper Road. I went to the Infants School, near Bishop Bonners Cott, 1928-1932/3, then National School and finally was Head Girl at Crown Road School. 1939 I worked in Hobbies ...Read more
A memory of Great Dunham in 1930 by
My First School
My dad was from yr Aber. We lived in Pandy Square until my dad died in Feb 1952, he was the fireman on the little train from Towyn to Abergynolwyn, he was also, I believe, a local football referee. He was an ex soldier in the ...Read more
A memory of Abergynolwyn in 1950 by
My Memories Of Chandler's Ford, Approx. L934/5
In the spring/early summer of 1935 I was admitted to Chanderr's Ford Sanitorium for treatment of tuberular glands in the neck. I spent six months there and have some happy memories of feeding ...Read more
A memory of Chandler's Ford in 1930 by
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
Captions
986 captions found. Showing results 289 to 312.
In 1622 it offered accommodation for servants of the royal household. When the railway from London to Cambridge was opened, the inn became a hotel.
The two soldiers passing the Fort Amherst site are probably Royal Engineers on their way back to the School of Military Engineering.
Left to right: The royal arms, showing England, France, Ireland and Scotland. King James VII. King Charles II.
In an age when many village pubs are closing, it is good to know that Rusper still boasts three inns - the Plough, the Royal Oak and the Star. Note the pretty timber-framed cottage on the right.
The Royal Pier, at the eastern end of Mayflower Park, was opened in 1833 and for many years was the largest in the south of England.
Bovington Camp dates back to the First World War, and is the home of the Royal Armoured Corps. The surrounding heathland is heavily used for tank training.
The Hoad Hill Monument at Ulverston is a replica of the Eddystone Lighthouse, and was built as a memorial to Sir John Barrow, founder of the Royal Geographical Society and for 40 years Secretary to the
He was professor of anatomy and surgery at the Royal College of Surgeons, and pioneered research on the motor and sensory nerves in the brain. He is buried in the local churchyard.
The Ship Hotel on the left is now known as the Ship and Royal.
On the right is the Royal Leamington Bath and Pump Rooms, with swimming pool and Turkish baths.
Here we see the Llandoger Trow Inn, whilst a little way down the street is the Theatre Royal, home of the Bristol Old Vic since 1946.
Even as late as 1957 the 'Royal Daffodil' carried 144,000 passengers down to Margate in a ten-week period.
Boer Gun 1904 Inscribed 'Ready Aye Ready', this cap- tured Boer gun is a memorial to Royal Marines and sailors from HMS 'Doris'.
Henry III once bartered Burton Bradstock in exchange for the royal regalia, which William the Conqueror had given to Caen Abbey.
The Royal Oak, now a private house, can be seen at the top of the street.
Across the Witham, Avenue Road becomes Beacon Lane and passes the old barracks of 1858 and 1872 of the Royal South Lincolnshire Militia, now occupied by an auctioneers and valuers.
It was the only Royal Castle in Surrey; the motte was raised soon after the Norman Conquest.
Traditionally the gathering place for the Royal family in the New Year, it was originally bought by Queen Victoria as a twenty-first birthday gift for Edward when he was Prince of Wales.
This view of a virtually deserted Emgate shows a street of sturdy 18th- and 19th-century houses leading up to the Royal Hotel at the top of the hill.
In the centre of this photograph is the Royal Hotel, a Victorian building that used to advertise itself as a 'Family and Commercial Hotel, fully licensed, premier position, garage'.
The Prince of Wales is a name chosen to honour many pubs, and is fitting for a Royal County.
Dee died a sad and lonely genius, isolated from the Royal Court that had once given him such a warm welcome.
The weekly cattle market, revived in 1920, was based on a royal charter of 1542. The tall building in the left distance was originally the Manse, and became a shop in the 1930s.
Many of its cottages were built in the 17th century, and the Royal Oak is older, claiming a date of about 1502. A famous treat, which is still sold today, was Granny's Nettle Beer.
Places (32)
Photos (1326)
Memories (992)
Books (2)
Maps (158)