Places
10 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,534 photos found. Showing results 2,641 to 2,534.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
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Memories
8,173 memories found. Showing results 1,321 to 1,330.
Jane Powell Ltd
My mother owned a dress shop in twickenham...and as I grew up I remember the swimming pool...which we broke into at night...about 1970...remember Pete Townsend wanting to rent our garage....and The Crown ballet school which was ...Read more
A memory of Twickenham by
School Days And Beyond
Having just stumbled on this website I felt compelled to add my recollections of living in Fenham in Cheeseburn Gardens from circa 1961 to 1980. I lived 2 streets down the hill from the first contributor who lived in Ovington ...Read more
A memory of Fenham by
Blackpool Should Have Stayed There.
Born in Victoria Hospital. Grew up on Knitting Row Lane, Out Rawcliff. Worked at Fox's Biscuits and Big Jim's Black Horse Boddington pub in Kirkham. Worked in the engineering shop at the Blackpool Pleasure Beach. ...Read more
A memory of Blackpool by
Main Street Shops
My Grandfather owned the K-shoes shop in Main Street - Albert Myers. I was born in 1970, and this is pretty much how main street looked while I was growing up, except the style of the cars!
A memory of Grange-Over-Sands by
Osterly Park View Road
I remember the Slatter twins who were in my class at St Marks (Robert and John). The Davis shop in the road. Watching my mother buy bacon and seeing it sliced as Mr or Mrs Davis turned the handle on the machine. As you ...Read more
A memory of Hanwell by
The School Years 1959 To 1971
It's great to see this picture. This parade was on the walking route to and from school, from where we lived on the new estate at Southbourne Grove to the Evangelical church hall (pre school), Hockley Primary School, then ...Read more
A memory of Hockley by
Any One Rember The Penny Drinks Shop
Any one remember the penny drinks shop on the Hanworth Road near to the traffic lights at the junction of Bell Road and Hanworth Road. opposite Silvesters.
A memory of Hounslow by
Wrong Place
This is not White Horse Caravan Park..... It is Mill Lane with the Quality Stores Shop on the left
A memory of Selsey by
Somerset Rd
hi every one , we lived at 26 somerset rd in the 60s when the house was brand new up untill 1975 when we moved over seas i went to stansfiled rd school and i have very fond memories , i have now moved back as i love failsworth it will ...Read more
A memory of Failsworth by
Our Old Shop
Across the road from the newsagent we had a small shop next to the butchers “creek road stores” that was around 1963-64. Denney,s stores. I now reside in the Netherlands
A memory of Hayling Island by
Captions
3,478 captions found. Showing results 3,169 to 3,192.
Thus, close to Oakwood Station this parade of typical 1930s small shops was built.
The parish church of St Mark is in the main part of the village, near the Methodist Chapel, the primary school and the village shop.
The parade of shops (left) proclaims that a once quiet seaside village is becoming a busy township - we can see Ellwood's, the Midland Bank, a chemist, and a newsagent and tobacconist.
The hairdresser's shop of C Moore (straight ahead) has become a restaurant, whose frontage now includes the right-hand window. Is the military jeep (centre) waiting for the horse and tumbrel to move?
Kent's prettiest village: the tower of its 15th- century flint-stone church of St Mary looks down on this spacious square lined with half- timbered Tudor and Jacobean cottages, houses and shops
In the 1940s the shop was the main Avon wool suppliers.
Chaplins, owners of the lorry outside the Joy Shop in picture L20007, carried goods not only for the Southern Railway but also for the Great Western, in whose premises they had their depot.
Chaplins, owners of the lorry outside the Joy Shop in picture L20007, carried goods not only for the Southern Railway but also for the Great Western, in whose premises they had their depot.
The fusion of industry and shopping was usual in the town. Baker & Son, boot manufacturers, have their headquarters next to Pears & Sons, the dentists.
Then as now, one could dawdle on the way to the beach and look at the gift shops or stop for a cuppa, or even have some oysters – an oyster stall is just visible (centre left).
The Cottage on the left, No 81, with the ornate tile hangings, has lost its shop front projection.
On the left-hand side, W Cushen, a silk mercer and undertaker's office, is followed by a fruiterer and greengrocer's, a stationery shop, a barber's, and a fishmonger.
It closed as a pub to re-open, fully restored, in 1987 as a shopping arcade, and the building to the left now has a large Pegasus sculpture attached to it.
The names over the shops - Ivor Griffiths and Williams the tobacconist's, Charles Kay and Birt's Stores - remind us that the Forest of Dean lies between Wales and England, embracing elements
Sarah Springer was in charge of the pints at the George & Dragon; Robert Heaton was the governor of the workhouse; and Hannah Hasland combined running a grocery shop with a drapers.The locals were
The building on the left curving into Bath Street from the Square, with its many gables and ornate shop fronts (now a Chinese restaurant), replaced the Rising Sun Inn, a three-storey timber-framed
This building survives because it is thought to be the premises of Little Nell's grandfather in Charles Dickens's novel 'The Old Curiosity Shop'.
This view captures the austere feel of the 1950s rather well, with little traffic and the 19th-century shop fronts still intact.
All has gone on the right as far as and including the high five-pot chimney stack, but on the left the high three-storey building of the 1890s, once the Chess Vale Temperance Hotel, remains as shops and
We are looking south-east along Neston's main shopping street, with the wall of St Mary and St Helen's church on the immediate right.
Working people usually had one set of clothes for work and another for best, and for a trip to the seaside the best clothes came out of the closet - or the pawn shop.
The Brown Cow and the Black Bull, built in 1855, were voted 'excellent', as was Hudson's ice cream shop, which was housed in what was originally the toll bar premises.
The 1793 fountain remains, while the Georgian bay windows to the range beyond conceal Bishop Bekynton's mid 15th-century Nova Opera, a range of houses over workshops and shops built along the
The trades of the Victorian shops were multifarious, and many businesses stayed open from dawn until after dark, sometimes trading as late as nine o'clock in the evenings.
Places (10)
Photos (2534)
Memories (8173)
Books (0)
Maps (71)