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
35 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Wood End, Berkshire
- Wood End, Hertfordshire
- Woods End, Greater Manchester
- Woodend, Essex
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Keswick)
- Woodend, Cheshire (near New Mills)
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Egremont)
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Boot)
- Wood End, West Midlands (near Coventry)
- Wood End, Greater Manchester (near Chadderton)
- Wood End, West Midlands (near Wednesfield)
- Wood End, Hereford & Worcester
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Nuneaton)
- Wood End, Buckinghamshire (near Mursley)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Kempston)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Bedford)
- Wood End, Greater Manchester (near Mossley)
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Tamworth)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Kimbolton)
- Wood End, Buckinghamshire (near Mursley)
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Redditch)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Ampthill)
- Woodend, Staffordshire
- Woodend, Fife (near Lochgelly)
- Woodend, Lothian (near Queensferry)
- Woodend, Northamptonshire
- Woodend Green, Essex
- Wood End Green, Greater London
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Arlecdon)
- Woodend, Nottinghamshire (near Sutton In Ashfield)
- Lower Woodend, Buckinghamshire
- Upper Woodend, Grampian
- Shenstone Woodend, Staffordshire
- Lower Woodend, Grampian
- Hanbury Woodend, Staffordshire
Photos
6 photos found. Showing results 241 to 6.
Maps
150 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 289 to 4.
Memories
2,335 memories found. Showing results 121 to 130.
What A Joy!
I am Pewsey born and bred and what a joy it is to discover a site where memories of our country's unique village life can be shared and stored for the future. So much to share about Pewsey life... I remember playing with all the children ...Read more
A memory of Pewsey in 1976 by
Mike's Barber Shop
I knew Mike. I used to go round his house and he would give me health foods and tell me how to stay healthy. I think he lived in Greenstead Road. He was a very nice man, very quiet but friendly. When he told me he was a barber I ...Read more
A memory of Loughton in 1963 by
Vindicatrix
I remember the nurse, she was called Codine Anne - you got that tablet for everything. We went to the Berkley gospel hall Sundays. We got tea and sandwiches and that was a luxury. Being at the sea school I had food parcels from home. ...Read more
A memory of Sharpness in 1956 by
East View And Munich
I lived at East View, Number 31 with Edgar and Myfannwy Howells from 1955 onwards. They were my aunt and Uncle. They looked after me when my parents died when I was 5 years of age. East View was a great street to be brought up ...Read more
A memory of Bargoed by
Egg And Chips???
I have a strange but lovely memory of Forest Coal Pit. Mum and Dad worked shifts when we were kids so dad would often take the four of us out and about on his own, but being a 70's dad wasn't so good at cooking or organising a ...Read more
A memory of Forest Coal Pit in 1973
Caravan Park
The caravan park by the river Derwent has now closed, my extended family had a static there and the countryside was beautiful. In the 1960s Romany gypsies would camp in the woods.
A memory of Whatstandwell in 1976
Wembley Triangle
I was 12 when I bought my first balsa wood glider from Wally Kilmisters model shop on Wembley Triangle. It made me more interested in model making as I continued to buy and make models and fly them at Sharons farm, a local park ...Read more
A memory of Wembley in 1972 by
The 1950s At St. Annes
I loved St Anne's. Great theatre, music and games, an all-round education. I'll always think that I got a great education there and I'm sad it's been pulled down. I wish I could find some of my class mates; Wendy Dew is in ...Read more
A memory of Sanderstead in 1953 by
Church Street Ref:E21047
The picture is of the bottom end of Church Street; the old Morris Traveller was my father's car and it is parked as seen outside 72, Church Street. I was born in Edenbridge, and lived in this house until I was 17. I have ...Read more
A memory of Edenbridge in 1958 by
Wood Farm Camp
I remember Wood Farm Camp. My dad was stationed there for three years & my mother, sister, dad & I lived at number 64. I remember the little pigs from the farm down the lane coming into the garden and me having to shoo ...Read more
A memory of Malvern Wells in 1952 by
Captions
583 captions found. Showing results 289 to 312.
The red brick building in the centre was a day school and lecture hall attached to the 18th-century Congregational church (the white pediment behind it).
The village is certainly one of Devon's prettiest, not least for its setting, strung in a series of hamlets around the junction of several pastoral and wooded combes.
It is an octagonal structure made of wood with an unusual three-tiered dome. The town took the cross over and installed a chimney clock in 1899.
This quiet little corner is on the north side of Torquay and reached by way of a romantic wooded ravine.
A timeless scene in one of the many creeks of the long estuary that runs between Salcombe and Kingsbridge.
The lady in her long black dress and the gentleman wait for the ferryman to take them across to the western side of the lake, where the wooded Claife Heights stretch away to the right.
This quiet little corner is on the north side of Torquay and reached by way of a romantic wooded ravine.
Gweek was at one time a port of some significance at the head of the tidal Helford River, which lies between the buildings and the wooded hillside.
Woods Corner is a hamlet in the parish of Dallington, about four miles north-east of Herstmonceux.
In the 19th century, this area south of Dorking was a wild and dangerous part of Surrey, where highwaymen pursued their villainous trade and smugglers transported their contraband goods at night along
Yarmouth Pier opened in 1876, and was built out of wood, a common material for the less elaborate piers.
The Whitewell Hotel in the Hodder Valley has long been famed for its hospitality and proximity to good fishing. Another view of brooding Pendle Hill can be had from Whitewell.
This famous shopping street started in the 1760s as a row of elegant houses designed by the architect John Wood.
This once thickly-wooded dell on both sides of the River Spodden had been thinned out somewhat by the 1890s.
The wooded ravine of Nicky Nook draws botanists and sketchers.
The waters of Stock Ghyll rise just below the summit of the Kirkstone Pass, north of the town, and plunge through this wooded gorge before joining the River Rothay and eventually entering Windermere.
The superb wood carving dates from 1380, and on the misericords it depicts vivid scenes of medieval life and legend.
The entrance block of the theatre was formed from Beau Nash's first house in Bath, a pre-Wood era building of 1720 with heavy moulded window surrounds and cornices.
This is the administrative centre of the city, with the late 19th-century County Hall, the Court House and the Town Hall.
The Plantation and Madeira Walk below The Beacon and Louisa Terrace are a delightful stretch of green wooded shelter on hot days.
Just downstream of Carr Wood waterfall is this smaller weir, whose race carried water via a flagstone channel under fields to the left to the Ashworth Estate corn mill.
Walk along Brock Street, and you reach the quite extraordinary Royal Crescent of John Wood the Younger.
Such were the number of visitors navigating the overgrown and makeshift route from the town centre to the beach that the Windsor estate prioritised the construction of a more permanent path.
Initially the home of the fishing fleet, the Albert Dock soon became the dock for the importation of wood pulp, paper, fruit and provisions and for the export of heavy vehicles, cars and industrial and
Places (35)
Photos (6)
Memories (2335)
Books (4)
Maps (150)

