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Photos
134 photos found. Showing results 301 to 134.
Maps
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Books
3 books found. Showing results 361 to 3.
Memories
540 memories found. Showing results 151 to 160.
Some History
Having some difficulty commenting/doing a memory of Llangoed. Wanted to use some specific photos shown, but have not had the option to add a memory to them. Maybe because I am the first to do one ? Anyway, the photo of the Post Office. ...Read more
A memory of Llangoed by
Some Historical Facts Of The Plumbs In Barroby
The newspaper published at Grantham in England, the original home of the ancestors of the well known Plumb and Parker families of Mills, Pottawattamie, Cass and Shelby Counties, recently carried a story ...Read more
A memory of Barrowby by
Some Childhood Years In Sorbie 1932 T0 1937
The family moved from Reay in Caithness to Sorbie in 1932 - I was 2 years old and had a sister who was 12 years old and a brother, 10 years old, so there was a huge difference in ages and I was brought up as ...Read more
A memory of Sorbie in 1930 by
Skewen 1983 4
I lived in Skewen from September 1983 to May 1984 - only a short time in my life but it made a big impression on me. My wife Fiona, new baby Siobhan and I rented a house at Caenant Terrace facing the railway and the mountain. We had moved ...Read more
A memory of Skewen by
Skerries View House Cemaes Bay
When I was a young boy, aged about ten or eleven back in 1947/48, I can remember going to stay with Mr & Mrs Henshaw who lived at the above house having moved from Tal Y Cafn in the Conwy Valley. From what I can ...Read more
A memory of Bull Bay by
Simply The Best
My parents took us to Kilchattan Bay every year from the mid 1960s. As far as my sister and I were concerned we didn't want to go anywhere else but KB. Used to love climbing the Suidhe which was a ritual for all Glasgow kids. ...Read more
A memory of Kilchattan Bay by
Silver St, Masham Scene
The Bay Horse Inn would then likely belong to T & R Theakston Ltd, which became a limited company in 1905. Now, 2012, the pub belongs to Greene King plc. The chimney in the background belongs to Lightfoot's Brewery, ...Read more
A memory of Masham in 1900 by
Shopping Memories.
On the left hand side of the photograph next to the zebra crossing is Eastwells, a greengrocers and fruiterers. My father Harold Besent who is in the window in a white coat was a partner and also the managing director from 1940 ...Read more
A memory of High Barnet in 1955 by
Shop And Post Office
My parents, Fred and Marjorie Reeks bought the shop and Post Office from Mrs Britton in 1947 and they owned the business till about 1985. In the mid sixties Fred got about 100,000 daffodil bulbs from a market garden in Darlington ...Read more
A memory of Eppleby by
Shepherd Street, Bow
Does anybody remember Shepherd St, Bow? The Widows Son pub used to stand on the corner(famous for its hot cross bun legend) The reason for my interest is my father lived there as a boy & he never knew anything of his past, ...Read more
A memory of East Ham by
Captions
870 captions found. Showing results 361 to 384.
Now the little harbour at neighbouring West Bay fulfils the function, though on an unambitious scale. There are maritime links, for much of the rope used by Britain's ships was manufactured here.
This archetypal fishing village was once entirely dependent on the mackerel shoals for its precarious economy.
The day's catch is auctioned. Though fish were abundant in Victorian times, Mounts Bay fishermen were possessive about their fish stocks.
Thurlestone takes its name from a holed, or thirled, rock just out at sea in Bigbury Bay, which was mentioned in a Saxon charter way back in 845.
The old rectory, of warm red brick, with its tall chimneys and light-gathering broad bay windows has creeper running rampant all over it.
The centre of the Market Place is marked by a splendid Victorian cast iron water pump, decorated with fish, crown and arrows, and the motto 'Defend They Ryghts'.
Here we see South Bay with a plenti- ful array of bathing machines.
It is a quiet day in Tadcaster's High Street as a cyclist pedals unconcernedly down the middle of the road.
Newby Bridge, spanning the River Leven, is the highest bridging point before Lake Windermere. It dates from the 16th century, and formed part of the turnpike route from Kendal to Ulverston.
The fishing village of Runswick Bay is set on a sheer cliff. It is also one of the most attractive harbourless villages along the Yorkshire coast.
This party of visitors have a wonderful view from a lookout over the bay, even though there is a mist. Large Victorian residences can be seen on the clifftop.
Beside the ruins of the great abbey church, various monastery buildings survive, including the famous 14th-century Abbot's Kitchen and the Abbey Barn.
East and to the left of this view, the St Audries Bay Holiday Club occupies the cliff tops at the end of a winding lane that descends from the main road.
Just a handful of people and two bathing machines can be seen in this late-Victorian photograph of Stokes Bay.
Glentworth Bay is pictured just five years before the causeway was built, creating Marine Lake.
A little way back from Freshwater Bay is the former home of the poet Tennyson, who loved the place but hated the constant procession of visitors.
Lansdowne Terrace, now the Lansdowne Hotel, and, at the right, the Wish Tower Hotel, was the first major devel- opment west of the Wish Tower; it is in the style of the earlier stucco terraces, with
In a picturesque setting of mature trees and a grassy churchyard, the building is in the main of the 14th century, apart from its two-bay 13th- century nave arcade.
Ships from South Wales carrying lime and coal were once regular visitors to the town.
When it opened in 1898, the pier was the terminus for the Swansea and Mumbles Railway, whose trains can be seen taking people to their destination on the first official day of pier business.
New villas sprang up along the front at Kents Bank on the Kent Estuary as the village became popular as a holiday resort.
This photograph was taken from almost from the same viewpoint as No 27690A, but looking west. This is a busier scene, and the dresses are less sombre.
The 19th-century church of St Michael stands on a steep hill, and was built of snicked stone.
There is plenty of activity in the South Bay as fishing boats are prepared for sea.
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