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Memories
655 memories found. Showing results 141 to 150.
The Good Old Days....
I started at the school in 1970, I still think it was the best school ever, we had a swimming pool which I thought was so cool, it was never heated though! But I got my width, length and 7 lengths certificate in ...Read more
A memory of Farnham Common in 1970 by
The Evans Sisters On Moorlands Avenue
The Evans sisters, their donkeys, and their Kindergarten School are a substantial part of my childhood memories. We lived around the corner from them, and we were sometimes boarded there when our parents ...Read more
A memory of Barton on Sea by
The Dilly Line
YEAR 1953 The steam train was known as the Dilly, it would haul trucks with shale etc from Throckley to Lemington on a single track to where the pit heap was, the trucks would go into a shed one at a time and a huge barrel type ...Read more
A memory of Newburn in 1953 by
The Cricketers Arms And The Town Hall
I always remember the Cricket Green as the lazy hazy days of summer. My father played cricket here, I don't remember the name of his team, but we had to sit and watch him. I liked it when the crocuses poked ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham in 1959 by
The Crescent, Kirkburton
I was amazed to come across this photograph. I lived at 7 The Crescent Kirkburton, from 1948 to 1966 and this is a photograph of our house. We lived next door to the Midgeley family and the Tunnicliffe family. David ...Read more
A memory of Kirkburton by
The Convent.........Fondest Memories
I went to the convent from around 1963 t0 1971 and I was very happy there as a little "German girl". We went on the mini bus from Swindon with a few pupils we picked up on the way and already had a jolly time ...Read more
A memory of Lechlade on Thames by
The Convent
My father died the year after I was born and his employer Burton's, provided for myself and my three brothers to attend private schools, which is how I came from London to the Convent at the age of 4. I followed my brother Colin who ...Read more
A memory of Bridport in 1947 by
The Castle
I was 9 years old when I moved with my family to Kirkcudbright. My father worked for Sir Charles Hope Dunbar. We moved into his castle and had a rear section as our home. I am not sure of the date, about 1940 the castle caught ...Read more
A memory of St Mary's Isle in 1940 by
The Burgh Heath Corn Stores
Pictured to the right of you Galleon Swimming pool photo and directly opposite was the Burgh Heath Corn Stores. It was sighted on the old Bake House and in the back room were several old brick ovens. I bought all my ...Read more
A memory of Burgh Heath by
The Bridge 40+ Years Of Memories
'Mum, did you catch fish in the pond at the Bridge' asked my son when Googling for ponds to fish. 0f course we did, with our home made nets of a piece of material attached to a stick, carrying home the ...Read more
A memory of Woodford Bridge by
Captions
405 captions found. Showing results 337 to 360.
Some things never change: in a rather dull street of 19th- and early 20th-century buildings, on a Midland Red bus route, the Council is digging up the pavement!
Some things never change: in a rather dull street of 19th- and early 20th-century buildings, on a Midland Red bus route, the Council is digging up the pavement!
The school is a beautiful knapped flint and brick structure, and so is its surrounding wall; it was built in 1876.
This mid 15th-century brick tower, here seen in rural tranquillity with cattle grazing, now sits amid football pitches near Boston College's Rochford Campus.
Situated on the corner of York Road and Girling Street, St John's was designed by Josiah Gunton of London and opened in April 1902.
HMS' St Vincent' (120 guns) was completed in 1815, but too late to take an active part in the Napoleonic Wars.
This tall Lincolnshire-style brick tower mill, seven storeys high, was built in 1819; it was powered by five patent sails and winded by a fantail.
Ven House c1955 Further downhill along London Road, Ven House is set back from the road beyond a forecourt.
Goring is a riverside village lying between the beech-clad hills of the Chilterns and the windswept slopes of the Berkshire Downs.
Bounded by Gosmoor and Charlton Roads, Priory Park was a favourite spot for picnics and Sunday afternoon strolls down to the banks of the River Hiz close to Brick Kiln Lane, Charlton, which runs behind
This tranquil scene shows the Gothic-style brick Methodist church of 1878, beyond creeper-clad number 37 in the foreground.
Tens of thousands of new entrants into the Merchant Navy received their basic training at 'Vindicatrix'.
At intervals on Severn Side, both north and south, steps leading from the sandstone quays were constructed.
By the late 1870s, the line was facing tough competition from Cunard, White Star, Dominion, and the Guion Line; Inman's problems were further compounded in 1881 with the loss of the 'City of Brussels
The gatehouse has distinctive diaper brick patterning and the arms of Bishop John Russel (1480-94).
The earlier pub on the site, made famous by the music hall star Florrie Ford, was demolished in the early 1920s, and rebuilt to a vaguely similar design.
The view looks at St Mary's from the north, along a varied terrace of possibly late 18th- and 19th- century houses which are not enhanced by the long brick boundary wall.
With the building of the Southampton and Dorchester Railway, which opened in June 1847, East Burton was on the wrong side of the tracks from Wool and its village facilities.
Lechlade, situated on the river Thames, is the gateway to the Cotswolds from the south-east.
Barkway spanned the main route from London to Cambridge, and it was only the coming of the railways in the 1850s that transformed it into a countryside backwater.
The lake is part of the moat surrounding the timber-framed manor house, once the home of the de Southchurch family.The central hall is open to the roof beams.A Tudor extension was added to the west
Bell Lane descends to the west of the A361 and gives us a good idea of the variety of building styles that make up this little industrial village.
One of the first buildings that the visitor will meet is the picturesque 15th-century thatched Axe and Compasses public house (centre).
The ancient harbour of Tenterden, this was once a shipbuilding centre and was visited by Henry VIII in 1538.
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