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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 171 to 180.
Childhood Memories Of Cargo Fleet
I always remember the November 5th Bonfire on the common opposite Hilda Woodall's (I think) shop on the corner of Chester Street and next to Dents Cobblers. We all stood around the magnificent bombfire feeling ...Read more
A memory of Cargo Fleet by
Childhood In Sutton
My memories of Manor Park were that on a Saturday morning we used to go to the Granada cinema for Saturday morning pictures. The cinema was right next to the park and we used to go in the park on our way home. I lived in ...Read more
A memory of Sutton in 1950 by
Childhood On Osborne Terrace
In 1949 the houses on Osborne Terrace were just being built, as soon as they were coming available the council were moving people in, our family moved into no 21. I was 4 years old. It was a lovely place then, nice ...Read more
A memory of Stacksteads in 1950 by
Children's Ward 1959
I spent several months in Treloar with Polio. I was five years old and from what I have been told, at deaths door. Can't say that I remember much except the nurses smiles and the pictures of Micky Mouse on the windows. I would ...Read more
A memory of Alton in 1959 by
Chilhood And Family
My family connection with LLandudno starts with my grandmother. She moved with her widowed mother, brother and sister from Sutton Coalfield sometime in 1900s. The family name was Ford, it comprised my great-grandmother Emma ...Read more
A memory of Llandudno by
Choir Practice In This Churchu
My friends and I were all in the choir here - I think it outnumbered the congregation usually. We had to share a vicar with Ludgershall. Choir practice was on a Friday evening. When the War ended in 1945 ...Read more
A memory of North Tidworth in 1944 by
Christchurch Primary School Vale Road Tunbridge Wells
I went to school here, 1958-1964 there exist photos of the school but so far none with the Frith Collection. The school was opposite Central Station in Vale Road and resembled a large ...Read more
A memory of Tunbridge Wells by
Christmas
This is about Christmas Day 57 years ago, and how things have changed. Even though we had nowt it was still a very exciting time, as it is now, but money was tight and we could only have the presents that each family could afford. What I ...Read more
A memory of Newburn in 1952 by
Church Lane
I was intrigued to read your memory as we lived at Roslyn from 1954 to 1964 and then moved to Frenchlands Lane where I have stayed, losing Jocelyn in 2004. Children Anne Jane Susan Ian Andrew and John all doing well. Village ...Read more
A memory of Lower Broadheath in 1954 by
Claybury Memories.
Both my parents were nurses at Claybury during the 1950s. My dad worked days and my mum worked nights. I can remember her telling me that when she did 'the rounds' during the night she used to ride her bike through the ...Read more
A memory of Woodford Bridge in 1950 by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 409 to 432.
The interior today is virtually unchanged, except that the boards listing the Ten Commandments have been removed from either side of the chancel arch and a new carpet has been fitted.
The pub has since lost its arched gable.
At Orford the chancel of c1166 was an outstanding piece of Norman architecture six bays long with vaulted aisles, of which only these arches remain.
Even the arched entrance on the corner remains the same.
Forever associated with its famous International Eisteddfod, Llangollen stands on the River Dee, seen here from the four-arched town bridge.
It is 17th-century in origin with 13 arches in total, but only 12 are visible from the west. To complicate matters further, only 6 are visible in this picture.
The church was restored in 1861 by Hutchinson, who rebuilt the chancel arch in the Norman style.
An earlier bridge at Bewdley, described by the topographer Leland as a 'goodly fair bridge over Severn of great arches of stone', probably led to the development of the town.
The ford that gave Allerford its name lies beside an ancient, two- arched packhorse bridge.
Wooden arches on stone pillars support the timbered walls and gables of this little gem. Note the ornamental barge boards.
You can see evidence of Saxon work in the walls of the nave, as well as the delicate sculpture of four Norman arches.
Comparison of this view with that seen today shows that some features have been restored inside the arch of the second sto- rey of the left-hand wall.
In the 1920s Torquay became not only a venue for family holidays but a much-loved destination for day trips, with tourists arriving by train and chara- banc.
Of the medieval church, only the chancel arch survives; the tower dates from 1606, the nave from 1842 and the chancel was rebuilt in 1931.
In the Victorian era Lyndhurst would have been a much quieter town.
Here in the centre of the village in the market place is a three-sided cross: three arches carry a spirelet, all in mellow golden limestone.
Burford Bridge is on the right, its wide 1927 main arch flanked by rebuilt medieval ones. Beyond the boat sheds is the Nag's Head on the Thames, as the pub is now named.
Behind is a shallow arch in which is a long poem, worth reading in full. Sir Thomas's widow Elizabeth married Lord Russell, who died in 1583; she died in 1609.
Here we see some of the forty arches of the Digswell, or Welwyn viaduct, built between 1848 and 1850 out of bricks fired on the site.
A much earlier bridge was replaced by this one in 1853; at that time, the harbour was being improved for the export of copper ore and import of coal.
This squat building was demolished in 1920, and underneath was found one of the arches of the old London Bridge. London Bridge woud seem to have been closed off to traffic.
The tower of St Mary's Church, resting on four uniform arches, dates from the 13th century. An alabaster carving of the Adoration of the Shepherds can be found in the chancel.
The mark of the inn sign can be seen on the wall above the arched doorways.
Although Brighton and Hove have now been amalgamated into a city, in the past Hove was a much quieter and more conservative town than its neighbour.
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