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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 201 to 210.
Daily Walk To Lectures
While I was at Durham University I attended St. Mary's College, on the opposite side of the River Wear from the City centre, and every day I had to walk across this bridge over the river, which was strictly a footbridge. The only ...Read more
A memory of Durham in 1956 by
Dancing On The Downs In Front Of Babbacombe Theatre
I spent a lovely sunny July evening with my morris dancing friends at Babbacombe providing a musical and dancing entertainment for the holidaymakers on the Downs. The entertainers were the ...Read more
A memory of Babbacombe in 2009 by
David Greig Shop
My granddad, Ron Beeson, was the manager of David Greig shop in Egham High Street from around 1956 until he died. My grandparents, Dad and uncle lived above the shop and my parents met when my mum went to work there. I spent a lot of ...Read more
A memory of Egham in 1971 by
Davyhulme Park And Around
Living on the Lostock Estate in a Council house on Radstock Road, I can remember being taken as a treat, to Davyhulme Park and the paddling pool/boating lake. What a big treat that was !! and then we used to, when older, go ...Read more
A memory of Stretford by
Days Kids
My memories of Mexborough were playing by the canal down ferry boat lane of church street , canal barges would come along and we would open the old bridge and let them through and the boat man would throw us pennies for our help. We would go ...Read more
A memory of Mexborough by
Days Out In Blackpool In The Forties And Fifties
Between the years 1944 and 1956 my family and I lived in Preston, Lancashire and from there it was only a short ride on the train or bus to Blackpool, where we spent many happy days. This photo shows ...Read more
A memory of Blackpool by
Ddol Terace
Hello. This is not so much a memory as a request. After the war my dad and mum moved to Cwm Penmachno from Liverpool with my younger sister and myself. I was four and a half years old. My dad had a job driving a motor car for a ...Read more
A memory of Penmachno in 1951 by
Decoy Country Park Near Newton Abbot
This Country Park is signposted just off the Penn Inn roundabout, and my family had a lovely outing there on a hot Spring Day. I have to guess that the photograph illustrated here is the site, because I ...Read more
A memory of Newton Abbot in 2012 by
Definately Not A Paint Tin! Woodford Wells
About a mile or so from South Woodford toward Buckhurst Hill, on the New Road, is Woodford Wells. My friend lived in the third house from the corner diagonally across from Bancrofts School. The ...Read more
A memory of South Woodford in 1942 by
Derby Home Guard/Derbyshire Golf Club House
Does anyone have any information about the Derby Home Guard 102 stationed at Markeaton Park during the latter part of WW2? I understand the Army used most of the buildings in the area, ...Read more
A memory of Mackworth in 1944
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 481 to 504.
The 16th-century stone bridge steps quietly by way of its five arches across the reedy Rothley Brook; the original roadway into the village is now reduced to a footpath.
Out of sight, screened by trees, is the parish churchyard and the Victorian church; to the south of the church stands the old font in a niche below a 13th-century arch from the old church
The magnificence of the church was rather spoilt by the 18th-century red brick tower with classical blank arches and windows (see photograph 35493), built after much of the medieval tower
Between them are the solid shapes of Sundial Cottage and Library Cottage, and No 11 with its gabled frontage above an arched doorway (centre right).
Behind the mini-van on the left, the Butchers Arms had replaced a much older half- timbered building damaged extensively by fire in 1939.
One such can be seen sandwiched between two barges. The Anderton Lift created a much faster passage for boats and increased the tonnage of river traffic to 226,000 in 1913.
After a disastrous fire in 1174, the new choir was designed by William of Sens, a French master mason who was versed in the Gothic style of northern France, with its pointed arches and universal stone-built
It is thought that Macbeth may have lived at Inverness Castle, or used it as a base for operations against the Orcadians.The suspension bridge superseded a stone bridge of seven arches which was destroyed
The chancel arch and font date from this time, the tower is late 14th-century and the south aisle was added during a restoration of 1531.
This view is taken from the brick four-centred arch into Market Square. The brick footpath heads towards the porch which, with the south aisle, was added in 1870 to designs by H E Rumble.
This is a much changed view: the working barges have gone, to be replaced by ranks of houseboats.
This is a much more recent view of this district of Worthing. Nearby there is a large old cemetery and chapel, with many graves of the wealthy.
Here at Fleshwick, visitors can explore this superb natural arch.
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.
His poem about the embittered fisherman Peter Grimes inspired an opera by a much later and better known resident, Benjamin Britten.
When Leeds town hall was opened by Queen Victoria, the streets were lined with palm trees and triumphal arches.
Here it can be seen at the end of the street, past the Lion Hotel and the arched entrance to the British Legion Club.
Coping stones now surround the edge of the lake, and the arch of roses that spanned Picklefoot Spring at the point where it emerges has been constructed.
An inscription on the underside of the central arch reveals that the bridge was 'finished in the year 1813 by John Dyson, Engineer, Jesse Bushrod, Mason.` Inside the downstream parapet, an 1827
statue of the Duke of Wellington seated on his horse, Copenhagen, has been situated on Round Hill since 1885, when it was brought from Hyde Park Corner in London where it had dwarfed the Constitution Arch
The second light stands a little way behind, in the town, a much taller tower modelled on the Pharos light of ancient Alexandria.
Not far from the cafe is the four-arch sandstone bridge over the Derwent, built in 1775 by York architect John Carr.
The arched footbridge gives access over the River Brett, which flows through the village.
This building replaced a much smaller church on the same site. The construction of the new St Augustine's began in 1865; dedication by the Bishop of Llandaff followed the next year.
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