Places
8 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
4 photos found. Showing results 261 to 4.
Maps
53 maps found.
Books
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Memories
789 memories found. Showing results 131 to 140.
From 1959 Gooshays Stanley Wright
I moved to Harold hill in 58 from shoreditch to Montgomery crescent then to 49 gooshays drive and my sisters Pat,Brenda and Sandra my brother Paul came in 63.I moved to Australia in 1978 with my wife Jacqueline and ...Read more
A memory of Harold Hill by
70yearsago
This is how long it is since I lived in Stokenchurch at "Rushmoor", Marlow Road. I left because my father was posted to Germany. My main memory is of a boy being sent to the Karenza cafe to get 6d worth of rubber rivets by a roustabout from the fair setting up on the Green.
A memory of Stokenchurch by
Circa 1952
Lydia Hall There were some lovely buildings that have been lost to demolition , the elegant Georgian Pear Tree House that was the Doctors home...the "Dutch" house on the green....and does anyone remember the Windmill that was left to ...Read more
A memory of South Ockendon
Brook Green
Hi Peter, I was one of those kids playing 50-a-side football on Brook Green; you and your brothers being older than us. I lived in Lindenhill Road up the hill. There use to be a brook going through the green. Also used to play tincan alley up in front of Admiral.
A memory of Bracknell in 1962
Cottages On The Green
Does anyone remember the cottages on the Green in Denham 1940-1950's? My husband's family used to live there and I would love to know more.
A memory of Denham by
Just A Puddle Jumper
I lived about 3 minutes from the beach and down the steps and on to patches of grass we used to go jump on. The tide came in and out and used to leave behind seawater puddles collected by the green patches of grass. Of ...Read more
A memory of Knott End-on-Sea in 1962 by
Police Station
I have only just found this site. I was born in 1944 in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, my Mom was sent there as bombs were falling still in the London area and Woodford was still getting there fair share. We lived in an alleyway ...Read more
A memory of Woodford Bridge in 1947 by
Growing Up In Gildersome
I was born in 1952 and lived in Gildersome until I was 19 years old. My name until then was Lorraine Thompson. I have many happy memories of living in the village. Until I was 4 years old I lived in a terrace called Green ...Read more
A memory of Gildersome in 1952 by
East Ham Memories
I was born in Plashet Grove in 1951 but shortly moved to 146 Milton Avenue until moving away from the area in 1967. So many memories. Happy days playing in Plashet Park, 30 a side football in Milton Avenue with a case football ...Read more
A memory of East Ham in 1951 by
Wallington Green.
I lived in nearby Harcourt Road. My late grandfather used to mow the grass and prepare it for the annual remembrance parade and open air service. During the hot summers the green would be packed by drinkers from the "Dukes Head" ...Read more
A memory of Wallington in 1963 by
Captions
357 captions found. Showing results 313 to 336.
On the north-east side of the county, Hose is situated close to the Nottinghamshire border in the Vale of Belvoir.
Claygate lies southwards beyond the A3 Kingston and Esher by-pass, and into the preserved countryside of the Green Belt.
This is the village centre, and it holds very special memories for the author.
The house which forms the angle with Chapel Street on the left is pre-17th-century, lately repainted and rethatched.
The plastered section of this long building was known as Webbs Cottages, and the southern range, Portsmouth Cottages. The first one of the latter was the Reading Room and Club.
Until the M25 and M23 by-passed Godstone, it had become seriously blighted by traffic on the Eastbourne road, the A22 and east-west traffic on the A25, which peaked in the 1960s and 1970s
Hardly any changes have occurred here; the custodians of Norton's past are determined to protect it for future generations. Norton was lucky in that it escaped the worst ravages of industry.
The 15th-century local granite and limestone church tower of St Peter and St Paul, heavily restored in 1872 by P W Ordish, shows above the houses of quality which bound The Green.
This is an interesting view of All Saints' Church at the south end of the Green.
On the west side of the green area called the Croft, backing on to the river, are the workhouse and St Gregory's off to the left.
By the time the castle was finished in around 1200, Richmond had grown in size; a market has been held here since 1155.
Back to the west of Blindley Heath the route reaches Outwood, a hamlet on the edge of heath and woodland, some of it owned by the National Trust.
This attractive view is little changed today, except that the Green, predictably, is kept close-mown now, and woe betide any daisy that shows its head.
We see the Green from the far side.The village (the name means 'the dwelling by the bow of the river') has two greens; because it was all part of the Pudsay estate, there was no pressure to expand
The 15th-century local granite and limestone church tower of St Peter and St Paul, heavily restored in 1872 by P W Ordish, shows above the houses of quality which bound The Green.
Some of the flavour of the old village remains in this view today, which looks eastwards along Broadwater Street East.
We see the Green from the far side.
This scene is still instantly recognisable from the green, where seats encircle a shade giving tree.
Centre left at No 33 is the Green Dragon, a cider house, which closed in the late 1960s.
This charming post office is still here, and overlooks the green and the beck.
This attractive group, which makes the most of the possibilities of tile-hanging walls, is on the Petworth Road just south-west of the Green.
A 17th-century house built of ironstone and Collyweston slates, facing the large green but spoilt by an odd door.
This was the site of much activity, including horse fairs, which continued regularly until the mid-20th century. The Green is today architecturally unchanged from this photograph.
To the west of Jervaulx lies this pretty village, nestling around the spacious green.
Places (8)
Photos (4)
Memories (789)
Books (0)
Maps (53)