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Memories
423 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
Caerau In The 60`s And 70`s
Born in 7 George Street, in 1963. So many great, wonderful memories of Caerau. Mort`s the fish shop. Tom the Barber. Wendels.Station Cafe. Library, Monkey Hotel. Con club, where every year during the summer they would run ...Read more
A memory of Caerau in 1970 by
Memories, Stirred
Have just stumbled on this site and the entries about Worksop and Carlton have stirred a few memories. I lived in Worksop from 1956 to 1979. Shops: MacFisheries, an old fashioned W H Smith. Machin's hardware, the brilliant C V Berry ...Read more
A memory of Worksop in 1970 by
Phythian Cres 1970
I was brought up in Phythian Crescent - with our own playing field. Many comments were made - is it a council property? I asked my parents - no it isn't. I believe the house behind ours was a farm - Phythian Farm, at the end is ...Read more
A memory of Penketh in 1970 by
West Horsley Previously Under Ockham
The Barley Mow, we went up there for my sister's hen night, and ended up at the caravan park down Green Lane. I have just visited it, well last year actually, and didn't realize it was such a lovely park, I ...Read more
A memory of West Horsley in 1970 by
Free Wheeling Down Pendle Hill
I was 19 years old and loved cycling. My aim was to cycle from Blackpool, where I lived, to Barley Youth Hostel on Pendle Hill. Unfortunately, I calculated too little time to reach my destination and found myself at the ...Read more
A memory of Barley in 1969 by
Hairdressers Banstead High Street 1969 1973
I worked as a Saturday girl at the hairdressers opposite the church in Banstead High Street when I was 15 in 1969. It was called Nicolette then and I worked for Margaret and her mother Mrs Anscombe. ...Read more
A memory of Banstead in 1969 by
My Mitcham
Have to say reading the entries of everyone’s memories is simply wonderful. Both my parents grew up in Mitcham, my father John Stockley who was Mitcham born and bred, married my mother Jean Nightingale in the church in Church Road back in ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham in 1969 by
St Bede's School
Wolseley Bridge has some memories for me going back to late 1968 and throughout 1969 as I was a pupil at St Bede’s School in nearby Bishton Hall. My mother was matron at the time and as we were mother and son (father died in ...Read more
A memory of Wolseley Plain in 1969 by
Bramley Memories And Me
I lived next door to Mr Dales newsagents on Highfield Road in Bramley. Opposite were rows of terraces in those days with a shop on the end of each terrace. A chip shop on the end of the first row and a ...Read more
A memory of Bramley in 1968 by
Childhood Memories Of Cranford
I used to live in Cranford from birth (1953) to 1968. We lived at 703 Bath Road and my dad, Peter Wilson, owned the local butchers over the other side of the road, Wilson & Sons. He used to make his own sausages, ...Read more
A memory of Cranford in 1968 by
Captions
82 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
On the south bank of the river is the Barley Mow, which is featured in Three Men in a Boat.
Note the barber's pole advertising the 'Haircutting, Shaving, Shampooing Saloon' on the right.
Outside King & Son (centre right) can be seen their saddle-horse, and beyond is the barber's pole of W Myers, who succeeded hairdresser Charles Todd, visible in 32280 (page 18).
Outside King & Son (centre right) can be seen their saddle-horse, and beyond is the barber's pole of W Myers, who succeeded hairdresser Charles Todd, visible in 32280 (page 18).
We can see the sign of the Barley Mow, which is set back from the street.
A barber's shop has replaced the radio shop on the left, and the Willingham Auction Rooms now occupy the adjoining building.
The shops in the foreground include a grocer's on the corner, and next to it is a barber's shop with its distinctive pole.
The main cargoes brought into Ipswich were grain, barley, coal and timber.
Just past the Village Green, the Boot (left), one of the oldest pubs in the village, and the Barley Mow beyond, are both still trading, although the General Stores between them has been demolished to make
There are still louvered windows on the ground floor, remnants of the time when the building was a malting with fires beneath the upper floors to help the barley laid out there to ferment.
A striped barber's pole projects out over the street, and just beyond it the Temperance Hotel and W J Penny, who sells ales and spirits.
The Barley Mow is one of the most famous and historic inns on the Thames.
Opposite, a barber's pole advertises a humbler shop.
Further downstream, weir pools have became the haunt for barbel, which were introduced into the river in the 1960s.
This photograph, taken from the east bank of the river, south of the Barley Mow pub, manages to exclude George Gilbert Scott's rather fine 1864 seven-arched brick bridge over the river.
Today so much of East Anglia's beautiful countryside is in the hands of more exploitative 'barley barons'.
Note the barber's striped pole outside his premises on the right.
Two people have time to chat, and perhaps the barber's shop on the left has some customers to attend to.
Over on the left we appear to have an umbrella maker and a barber.
The barber's pole (centre right) has also gone.
Built in 1561 in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, the half-timbered Barley Mow Inn is the one constant factor in Warrington's old Market Place.
The village church is seen here from the Gothic, six-arched river bridge of 1864, which links Clifton Hampden with the Barley Mow inn.
The barber's shop on the right is still a hairdressers.
Fishing has been popular on the Teise since Victorian times, with grayling and barbel sought from Finchlock's Bridge along to Hope Mill.
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