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Maps
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Memories
2,048 memories found. Showing results 131 to 140.
Fish & Chips In Brightlingsea
During the late 40's and 50's we all travelled to Jaywick Sands for our summer and bank holidays and on the weekends made regular excursions to the nearby seaside resorts of Frinton and Walton-on-the Nase but my ...Read more
A memory of Brightlingsea by
100 Melody Road. Wandsworth S.W.18
In 1943/4 My mother, brother and myself were bombed out of our home in Summerly Street. In that house we had a Morrison shelter and the night the bomb hit, a few houses away from our house, it affected our shelter ...Read more
A memory of Wandsworth by
My Life At Welbec Secondry Modern School An The St Hellier Est
I went to Welbeck Secondry Modern school for the last 2 years of my school life. At 13 I passed a 13+ exam and at Welbeck we underwent a 2 year basic building course. We did all the ...Read more
A memory of Calmore
Dear Old Nunhead
I was born in nunhead in 1939,lived in barset road,nunhead,i survived the bombing years,was avacuated for a while,then returned to hide in the Anderson shelter in our back garden,went to holidale road school,then on to Peckham rye ...Read more
A memory of Nunhead by
Anyone From Or Remember Barmore Street
Hello, I spent my early childhood in Barmore Street, which holds special memories. I do have an old photo showing a Street Party, which I will endeavour to upload (not sure how yet). The Queens Head Pub was ...Read more
A memory of Battersea by
Camberley...Where Do I Start ?!
Our family lived at Lightwater (1 High View Road) ; I passed 11 plus and was sent to Frimley And Camberley County Grammar School, starting in Sept. 1959. One of the first things we had to do was to get the uniform. We ...Read more
A memory of Camberley by
Langdale House Salford
I lived in Langdale House, Salford. It was a block of masonettes, there were two other blocks on the same road, Patterdale and Ennerdale. We lived on the 3rd floor, overlooking a small play park and a row of tiny one ...Read more
A memory of Salford in 1960 by
Torture
I was here with my sisters in the 1980s and I remember it as scary and horrible. There was 3 teachers i remember miss fletcher she worked in a wee tiny tiny shop with her wee white dog.miss lockie old women played piano in ...Read more
A memory of Fornethy Residential School by
Lancing Children's Convalescent Home.
In 1952 or 1953 I was a sickly 5 year old. I had 2 brothers, they were twins and one, unbeknown to me was dying of leukaemia. I was sent on a train with a lady and some other children, for a holiday in Lancing. I ...Read more
A memory of Lancing
Gone For Ever
IN THE 1940s TILL THE 1960s, NUNHEAD WAS FULL OF STREETS OF HOUSES THAT HAD MANAGED TO SURVIVE THE WAR YEARS, EVERYONE KNEW EVERYONE, MOTHERS WOULD CHAT AT THE FRONT GATES OF THEIR HOUSES, THE CHILDREN PLAYED IN THE STREETS WITH NO FEAR ...Read more
A memory of Nunhead by
Captions
1,059 captions found. Showing results 313 to 336.
Victorian guide book writers were not impressed by the bathing at Ryde.
As with so many towns to the west of London, Cranford lies on the old stagecoach route to the fashionable city of Bath.
For decades, just as in this picture, people have sun bathed along the sea wall.
Robert Raikes (1735-1811) is acknowledged by many to be the founder of the Sunday school movement, having opened the first such establishment in St Catherine Street in 1780.
Sandown and its twin resort of Shanklin, a couple of miles to the south, are connected by a long prom- enade that winds around the curve of Shanklin Bay.
Given the difficulties with bathing, the sea front was given over to recreational use; it was a place to sit and relax, watch the ships in the Solent, hire a boat to explore the coastline or seek out
Towards the edge of the village are former Rural District Council houses, now with lusher gardens, and opposite is a former Nonconformist chapel dated 1898.
Witham's High Street—Newland Street—lies along the Roman road to Colchester, later to be the Great Essex turnpike.The Spread Eagle and the White Hart—two important stopping places for a change of
The sand dunes and beach make Greatstone the ideal place for families.
Most visitors come to Abbotsbury to see this famous swannery, thought to be the biggest in England.
St Giles' church is reputed to be the second oldest church in the city after the cathedral.
This view shows Bridge Street on the north bank of the Kennet and Avon canal.
This photograph shows the Bath Arms Hotel, the old Literary and Scientific Institute, and the ever-increasing traffic.
The old mill dates from the 15th century.
Although the bathing boys are the subject of this photograph, of particular interest is the steam coaster alongside the new pier in the background, where construction work still appears to be going on.
By 1839, the parish church of Holy Trinity was becoming a little run down.
Here we see a very crowded Ramsgate beach, with the pier in the distance on the right beyond the massed bathing machines.
Looking westward, this is the top lock of the Caen flight, which at one time had gas lighting installed for night time working.
This impressive bishop's throne is said to be the highest in Christendom.
Two Thames sailing barges discharge cargo at low water on the beach, whilst drawn higher up are some bathing machines.
With the development of St Mellons, Trowbridge and most recently Pontprennau, Cardiff and Newport move geographically closer.
In the foreground are Thames barges with their characteristic lee-boards - a form of offset keel which can be raised in shallow waters.
A sign on one of the boats advertises sea trips, and the 'Frank and Elizabeth, the 'Sunbeam' and another craft seem to be quite busy.
The bathing machines wait for customers on Scotch Head (right), and so do the stalls along Pier Road (centre).
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