Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Holmwood Corner, Surrey
- Newlands Corner, Surrey
- Tattenham Corner, Surrey
- Hawthorn Corner, Kent (near Herne Bay)
- Ashcott Corner, Somerset
- Clopton Corner, Suffolk
- Camp Corner, Oxfordshire
- Duck Corner, Suffolk
- Court Corner, Hampshire
- Crackthorn Corner, Suffolk
- Corner, The, Shropshire
- Dorley's Corner, Suffolk
- Kenton Corner, Suffolk
- Lamb Corner, Essex
- Stafford's Corner, Essex
- Primrose Corner, Norfolk
- Pye Corner, Kent
- Fox Corner, Bedfordshire
- Ganwick Corner, Hertfordshire
- Harman's Corner, Kent
- Narrowgate Corner, Norfolk
- North Corner, Cornwall
- Northmoor Corner, Somerset
- Norton Corner, Norfolk
- Misery Corner, Norfolk
- Birchhall Corner, Essex
- Black Corner, Sussex
- Blackpool Corner, Devon
- Batt's Corner, Hampshire
- Broomer's Corner, Sussex
- Corner Row, Lancashire
- Chequers Corner, Norfolk
- Eckington Corner, Sussex
- Elm Corner, Surrey
- Cripp's Corner, Sussex
- Langley Corner, Buckinghamshire
Photos
1,214 photos found. Showing results 361 to 380.
Maps
599 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
2,797 memories found. Showing results 181 to 190.
Lennard Road
I believe this photo is of the Holy Trinity Church, on the corner of Lennard Rd (spelling incorrect above) and Cator Rd. Opposite was a church hall, where I attended Brownies. I think some of the other comments may refer to a different Holy Trinity church.
A memory of Beckenham
At St. George’s School
I was at St George’s School from 1943 - 1949 and I seem to be unique in my really happy time at the school. Mr Smith was very kind and gentle - he really hated having to take a ruler to my hand once - and yes Mrs Smith was ...Read more
A memory of Mill Hill by
The Salford Girl 3
My maternal grandmother, born in 1885 in Salford, as a girl worked in the mills. Up to the time of her death in Ladywell hospital, at the age of 93, she always wore long clothes to her ankles and a woollen, thick shawl. When gran ...Read more
A memory of Salford by
Dolobran Road, Sparkhill
I lived on Dolobran Road Sparkhill from 1956 (DATE OF BIRTH) to around 1962 when we moved to Northfield. We were the only double fronted house on the street and we fronted Lime Grove where my grandmother lived at Number 1. ...Read more
A memory of Sparkbrook by
Outside Our House
This brings back vivid memories of growing up as the doctor's son. Our house not quite in this shot was on the left just here. The wing of the car could have been my father's an Austin Devon. As a five year old I would ...Read more
A memory of Wells-Next-The-Sea by
Growing Up In Seaton Sluice In The 1960s
I moved from Blyth to Seaton Sluice into a newly built house in Cresswell Avenue in 1957. Life as a child in the village was exciting; most days we would either play on the beach and harbour or the new ...Read more
A memory of Seaton Sluice by
Childhood
I lived in Mayfield Road, which is where the foreground bollards are situated, from 1961 -1979. The junction was a little bit treacherous when cycling in the wet as I found out to my cost. Although a Girls school, boys could attend in ...Read more
A memory of Sanderstead in 1965 by
By The Cut
born in 1948 in a place called Cappenfield near Bilston, just off Dudley street, just four houses in a row surrounded by fields,, the canal, or cut, as we all called it ran alongside, and it narrowed down to what we called the stop,it was ...Read more
A memory of Tipton by
Early Career Memories At Piccadilly Circus.
I started my career in January 1959 as a young bobby at West End Central Police Station Savile Row. The trestles positioned to the east of 'Eros' which cordon off the road suggest the photograph was taken ...Read more
A memory of London in 1959 by
The Abandoned Car.
This photograph shows my father's car reg EDE 3 at the traffic lights in Castle Square. He was William Gywther Thomas, Divisional Highways Surveyor. The reason the car looks as if it has been abandoned was that the traffic ...Read more
A memory of Haverfordwest by
Captions
1,235 captions found. Showing results 433 to 456.
But the most impressive Victorian building in Sheffield was the new town hall on the corner of Surrey Street and Pinstone Street, where an area of old housing had been demolished to make way for
This autumn picture of Harnham Gate and the southern corner of the Close reflects then, as now, a secluded and quiet area of the Close.
It stands on the edge of King George's Field in a quiet corner of Wordsley.
Farmers gather at the corner to mull over the issues of the day.
Broomfield Road corner was already a problem, with its 'No Right Turn' signs and people wary of crossing the road.
The carriage on the left is the private conveyance of the London Hotel, just around the corner.
Note the bus stop on the corner ( left) - buses no longer enter the Market Place today. The Red Lion Hotel (left) is being renovated.
The sick, dying and injured were brought from the war-torn corners of the British Empire and the 570ft-long pier enabled casualties to be carried ashore from the troop ships.
This is the Bell Lock near Chalford: the lock around the corner is known (unsurprisingly) as the Red Lion. The children play with dolls and boats, unfettered by today's safety police.
On their return they were cornered in the George Inn. They were tried at Ely: many were transported to Australia, and five were publicly hanged.
Moss's are still on the corner bearing their name, and now have a second shop on the opposite side of the road. Two buildings further down is the Brotherhood House. Next to Blindell's is the Croft.
Beyond, at the corner of Silver Street, is the old Constitutional Club of 1895, lots of blood red terra cotta, with the Usher Gallery beyond.
Note also that Buddens tailors shop on the corner of The Square has been demolished and replaced by the London Joint City Bank, established in 1836.
The building on the corner is now part of the Mermaid restaurant.
On the right is the Haymarket Theatre facing down Charles II Street, where His Majesty's Theatre stands on the corner; in 1952, with the accession of Elizzabeth II, the theatre became Her Majesty's.
In the earlier one, looking north up High Street, The Greyhound Inn is still an 18th-century colourwashed building, while Burgis' shop on the left corner and the dor- mered cottages beyond are
Of course most of the shops have changed hands, for example Killwick's, (pronounced Kill'ick's) the furniture shop, is no longer on the corner of Station Parade.
The post box still stands in the garden of the shop at the corner of Station Road and Woodside Road, but the telephone box, peeping into the left of the photograph, has disappeared.
The crowd in this picture look as if they are waiting for the trader on the corner to open his doors for business.
All this seems miles away from the activities on the Broad, which is just around the corner.
Round the corner to the Eastbourne Road, with The Bay Hotel on the right, the architectural quality drops sharply to typical seaside nowhere.
Warringtonians would probably describe this as Market Gate, but Frith's view records the original concept of 1908 to create four matching corners, 'a spacious circus, perfectly symmetrical in shape with
On the corner of Low Road, leading to the King's Head, are houses called St Margaret and St Mary (centre left). The prominent jettied timber-framed building facing us is Waterloo House of c1540.
On the left is the corner of the brick-fronted manor house. The top of the church tower fell in 1829, which gave it a castle-like appearance. It was not restored until the 1960s.
Places (140)
Photos (1214)
Memories (2797)
Books (0)
Maps (599)