Maps

671 maps found.

1899, Newton Ref. RNE791699
1897, Newton Ref. RNE791704
1898, Newton Ref. RNE791709
1895, Newton Ref. RNE791720
1898, Newton Ref. RNE791722
1925, Newton Ref. POP791666
1925, Newton Ref. POP791671
1923, Newton Ref. POP791673
1921, Newton Ref. POP791686
1920, Newton Ref. POP791696
1923, Newton Ref. POP791704
1922, Newton Ref. POP791705
1919, Newton Ref. POP791710
1919, Newton Ref. POP791712
Newton, 1947, Newton-In-Bowland Ref. NPO791672
1947, Newton Ref. NPO791675
1946, Newton Ref. NPO791701
1946, Newton Ref. NPO791722
1946, Newton Ref. NPO791725
1902, Newton Ref. RNC791699

Books

1 books found. Showing results 25 to 1.

Memories

218 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.

Anyone Remember Newton Street?

My friend used to live in Newton Street, her mum was Mrs Brooks I just sent my friend the Gorton book, I don’t think Newton Street is there any more but someone might remember it. She went to Yew Tree school mid 1940s, these ...Read more

A memory of Gorton by Dave James

St Brendan's Church

This is the Church that Father Daniel Cronin worked long and hard to have built. From being very young, I can remember the fund raising that went on to build a new Catholic Church to serve the ever growing numbers arriving in Corby. We ...Read more

A memory of Corby by Moira Jones

Richard Alexander

Richard Alexander was born in Old Newton 1780. He is my great great great grandfather. He was married to Mary Sharman, don't know where she was born but she died in Bacton 1852. I am coming to Earl Stoneham for a week in April ...Read more

A memory of Old Newton by regknowles

Summer Days Beside The Cam

From 1947 to 1956 we lived at Hardwick and drove into Cambridge once a month I enjoyed it on hot summer Saturdays, when we would have a picnic on the backs overlooking Kings College. I remember seeing the sad sight of ...Read more

A memory of Cambridge by Martin Newell

Policeman's Daughter

My dad Harry Newbon, became the village bobby in 1956. We lived in the police house in Wellfield Road until 1964 - the happiest days of my young life. Attending the village school where the head was Mr Hayton. Does anyone ...Read more

A memory of Alrewas by Christine Burton

Goodrington

I was born in 1948 in Wallasy Cheshire, now Merseyside. As my maternal grandparents lived in Plympton, we used to spend two or three weeks with them every year. A day out to Goodrington was very popular, travelling by train from Plympton ...Read more

A memory of Paignton by Edward Godfrey

1944?

I grew up in Glasgow and my dad Hughie Crawford often talked fondly about Newton Poppleford and Colaton Raleigh. He was in the Royal Marines during the war and was stationed at Lympstone and then Torquay. I know he visited Newton Pop along ...Read more

A memory of Newton Poppleford by hucr

Long House

I'm Alison, I remember alot of kids there , I used to share a room with the older Alison before she left. Does anyone remember Christina? A carer may be a nun lol Anee was by far my favourite very sadly missed. Anyone ...Read more

A memory of Long Hanborough by airsupply002

My Birth Place

I was born in Coundon in 1949, back then my parents and grandparents lived in William Street which does not exist anymore. My dad and grandad were both called George Gowton; my mother's name was Irene and my Grandma's name was ...Read more

A memory of Coundon by Audrey Klueter

Cards Bakery, Exchange St, Attleborough

I lived at the Bakery with mum, dad and Sandy, my sister from 1954 to 1966. Dad was initially a baker and confectioner but it was my mum, Marie, who ran the shop most of the time. My favourite memories are ...Read more

A memory of Attleborough by Avril Smith

Captions

108 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.

Caption For Maiden Newton, The Mill 1906

Maiden Newton's mill is probably situated on the site of many earlier mill buildings.

Caption For Melbury Osmond, Post Office C1955

Dorchester Road 1906 Maiden Newton makes a good centre for exploring the Dorset downs.

Caption For Frome Vauchurch, From Coombeside C1955

Not far from Maiden Newton, Frome Vau Church (as it should properly be called) is pastoral and peaceful, with wildfowl in its river and cattle grazing around pasture and orchard.

Caption For Bovey Tracey, Coach For The Moors 1907

It was on the railway from Newton Abbot to Moretonhampstead, but the line closed to passengers on 28th February 1959.

Caption For Newton, Newton Hall Holiday Centre, The Club House Bar C1960

The bar staff are in attendance, possibly waiting for customers after the Newton, Clifton and Salwick Field Day, very popular in the 1960s.

Caption For Staining, Thornfield Holiday Camp C1955

Of Hardhorn, Newton, and Staining, only the last name is mentioned in the Domesday Book.

Caption For Compton Abbas, The Village C1955

As if one Compton Abbas was not enough, Dorset is fortunate enough to have two: one is near Maiden Newton and is usually known as West?

Caption For Uppingham, School Quadrangle 1927

Architectural greats such as G E Street, Ernest Newton and later Oliver Hill worked on the school buildings, a classic collection of their kind.

Caption For Maiden Newton, High West Street 1906

Maiden Newton stands on the high road between Dorchester and Crewkerne, probably on a very old route between Dorset and Somerset.

Caption For Maiden Newton, Dorchester Road C1960

Maiden Newton has been a much-appreciated centre for walking holidays in recent years, for many of the best villages and beauty spots on the Dorset downlands are within reach.

Caption For Newton Abbot, From Decoy 1906

Another open area of Newton Abbot is Decoy, to the south of town.

Caption For Newton Abbot, Globe Hotel And St Leonard's Tower 1906

After the railway reached Newton Abbot in 1846, it soon acquired a reputation as a Victorian railway town.

Caption For Newton Abbot, Clock Tower 1898

Standing at the head of the Teign estuary, Newton Abbot underwent a remarkable growth, tripling its size after the arrival of the railway in 1846.

Caption For Colsterworth, The Village C1960

In the part-Norman parish church of this large and attractive village the great Isaac Newton was baptised.

Caption For Newton Abbot, The Market 1925

Newton Abbot market has changed a great deal in both character and appearance since this photograph was taken in the 1920s.

Caption For Maiden Newton, Dorchester Road 1906

Maiden Newton makes a good centre for exploring the Dorset downs.

Caption For Newton Poppleford, The Main Street C1965

Newton Poppleford clusters for a mile along the highway from Exeter to Lyme Regis.

Caption For Brecon, Newton Pool 1910

Taken on a bright day, this shows Newton Pool pictured from across the water.

Caption For Uppingham, School, Shrine And Headmaster's House 1922

The Chapel on the right has the polygonal war memorial shrine attached, designed by Ernest Newton (1920).

Caption For Bishop Auckland, Newton Viaduct 1898

Here we see the impressive masonry-arched Newton Viaduct.

Caption For Maiden Newton, The Mill C1960

Maiden Newton's mill spent a number of years in the 20th century as a carpet factory, in the same way that many of Dorset's old mill buildings had to find new uses in the modern age.

Caption For Roseberry Topping, And The Kings Head C1960

This view from The King's Head at Newton-under-Roseberry shows the quarried face of Roseberry Topping, known affectionately as 'the Matterhorn of Cleveland', which stands at just over 1,000 feet above

Caption For Roseberry Topping, C1885

At the foot of Roseberry Topping is the hamlet of Newton under Roseberry, and in this view we see the Kings Head Inn (extreme right).

Caption For Newton Poppleford, Ye Olde Toll House C1965

Newton Poppleford takes its name from the round stones, or popples (like the pobbles of Budleigh Salterton), that abound in the area; it was a fording place over the Otter for centuries