Places
12 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
191 photos found. Showing results 321 to 191.
Maps
115 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 385 to 1.
Memories
1,374 memories found. Showing results 161 to 170.
Jaywick!
Our Aunt had a really Art Deco property in Jaywick- curvey windows, flat roof the size of a football pitch(it seemed); huge room with amazing folding dividing doors. And the whole place smelt of Jaywick sand. Not polluted sand, but ...Read more
A memory of Clacton-On-Sea
Totternhoe Heritage
I used to walk this path every Sunday on my way to Sunday school at the chapel. Such a beautiful chapel, everyone so musically inclined, and afterwards we'd walk back home through the "beeches". This place becomes dearer to me every day, ...Read more
A memory of Totternhoe by
Cowden Caravan Memories
We (Nelson family) spent our summer in the 50s in a caravan on a site within walking distance to the beach and water. I have fond memories of that beach and ocean including shrimping with our big nets we pushed along the edge ...Read more
A memory of Cowden
Bournmouth In The 50's
When Dad had the motorbike and sidecar it was okay for day trips, but when we went for the fortnight summer holiday the bike could not carry us and the suitcases, so we had to go by other means. To get to Bournemouth we ...Read more
A memory of Bournemouth by
Location, Halfway Along The Beach Between Thorpe Hall Boulevard And The Broadway.
Location clue - the glazed, cream-painted passenger shelter atop the sea wall, originally built as the Terminus Station for the Esplanade Trams, then taken over by the ...Read more
A memory of Thorpe Bay by
Looking Westwards, Towards Thorpe Hall Boulevard Junction With The Esplanade.
In 2014, across the road there are tennis courts, and from Google Earth it looks like a thriving Sports Centre. If there were tennis courts on that site in 1963, hardly ...Read more
A memory of Thorpe Bay by
Looking Westwards, Towards Thorpe Hall Boulevard Junction With The Esplanade.
In 2014, across the road there are tennis courts, and from Google Earth it looks like a thriving Sports Centre. If there were tennis courts on that site in 1963, hardly ...Read more
A memory of Thorpe Bay by
Sea Water Bathing & Paddling Pools, Between Chelsea Ave And Elizabeth Rd.
No doubt at all about this location. The Facility was renovated after the neglect of 5 years of war, but was never very popular. One had to pay to use the swimming pool, but ...Read more
A memory of Thorpe Bay by
1968 To 1976
We took our children every year from 1968 till 1976. There was a building near the beach behind Kinmel Bay which has diamond shaped leaded windows. Does anyone have a photo please? We stayed at Winkups too.We went to the club every ...Read more
A memory of Towyn by
Born And Bred In Langley From 1943 To 1967
Norn at no 36 Main Road, mother Marion Simpson married to Frank Williams, schooled at Langley Primary School, Beech Hall Prep School and Macclesfield Grammar, worked at the blood transfusion ...Read more
A memory of Langley by
Captions
1,131 captions found. Showing results 385 to 408.
All of this area of the sea front is now part of the Exmouth Fun Park, a modest theme park for the young and not so young who want a break from the miles of sandy beaches.
Here a little Victorian girl poses among the rowing boats laid up on the beach at Arnside.
For many years it housed the famous antiquarian bookshop Beach's, which survived until 1999.
This view shows the sea-front and beach, looking towards the pier. The sands are replete with bathing machines, boats, children and ladies with parasols: Victorian seaside gentility.
Radnor Cliff was where many of the town's wealthy residents lived; here their houses overlook the beach, where a naval man appears to be getting his boat ready for sailing.
This is now Coral Beach, with made-up roads and caravans that look more like mobile homes.
Fishing boats lie at their moorings on the left, while a small cargo carrier lies moored just off the beach. Horses and carts were still the best way of loading and off-loading in a tidal harbour.
The beach could be reached by a series of steps known as 'The Hundred Steps'.
Even the dog looks as though it is enjoying itself, and the donkeys are certainly keeping busy on this beautiful beach.
Serried ranks of bathing tents and a crowded beach spell out summer fun at Broadstairs during the early twentieth century.
, unlike many south coast resorts, faces east; it is therefore possible to sit on hot sunny days without the glare of the afternoon sun in the face.This accounted for the popularity of the long beach
Children play at the south end of the beach. Beyond them is the headland on which the Borth war memorial was built after the First World War.
It was during this time that most of the wooden cottages and shops along Beach Road became the concrete amusements and shops we know today.
Giltar Point is an expanse of limestone projecting out into the sea at the end of Tenby's South Beach.
It was for many years the haunt of Dorset smugglers, who landed their cargoes on the nearby beach of Seatown.
The suspension bridge across to a house on the Island is still a feature of Newquay's Towan Beach. Note the bathing machines down by the water's edge on the extreme left.
Children with hoops play on the clifftop promenade, a breezy spot high above the beach. The octagonal building is a newspaper kiosk. Today, the east promenade overlooks the new Ramsgate Port.
Holidaymakers enjoy themselves on Margate Beach. Note the prams in the centre of the picture, and that virtually everyone seems to be fully clothed and wearing a hat of some sort.
Industry and leisure mix in this beach scene. In the foreground are Thames barges with their characteristic lee-boards - a form of offset keel which can be raised in shallow waters.
In the foreground on the beach is a Punch and Judy show, an evergreen attraction which here appears in danger of being swept away by the boisterous Bristol Channel swell.
Sandy Bay is Littleham's beach, offering some of the finest bathing on the East Devon coast.
East Runton offered visitors the same spectacular cliff scenery and ample beaches as its close neighbour, Cromer, but less of the noise and bustle.
Neither the promenade nor the gardens by it have been built, and the stone facing of the railway embankment slopes right down to the beach.
The beach is one of the nearest to Cardiff and was very popular with parents and young chiuldren and those who thought Penarth too commercialised.
Places (12)
Photos (191)
Memories (1374)
Books (1)
Maps (115)