Places
12 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
191 photos found. Showing results 481 to 191.
Maps
115 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 577 to 1.
Memories
1,374 memories found. Showing results 241 to 250.
Tiegnmouth 1948 1990
1945 As a boy of 15 and living in Banstead road carshalton Beeches, I had two friends named Raymond & Peter Colly, there father Mr Colly who was a clockMaker and was badley burnt in WW2. Shortly after the war went back to ...Read more
A memory of Teignmouth by
A Watchet Boy
I was born in Woodland Road in 1948. The houses were brand new. I used to watch the builders from Dates going up the road to work on the houses at the top. I would stand on next door's doorstep and swear at them as they passed. My ...Read more
A memory of Watchet by
Southend On Sea In The 50's
Southend-on-Sea in the 50’s At the housing estate in Mitcham where we lived they had a tenants association. Every Friday night, two of the committee would go round to the Elm Court flats in Mitcham, where we ...Read more
A memory of Southend-on-Sea by
Happy Days
I was born at Green Roof Chase Lane and then moved to Sutherland Road as a 2 year old. The council houses had just been built. I have happy memories of attending Tittensor primary school which is now Old School Wines. Mrs Beech used to see us ...Read more
A memory of Tittensor by
How L Love Whitstable
I came to whitstable at the age of 11years old from the east end of London I was sent to St Vincent's school in castle road l was there for 3 yrs in 1967 and was sent back home to London must say l fell in love with ...Read more
A memory of Whitstable by
Cove Cafe, Hayle Beach, Cornwall Then And Now
The Cove Cafe, a simple structure on the steps at Hayle beach, dates back many years to the early 20th Century, and is still amazingly in existence today, the tides and weather have not claimed it. Having had ...Read more
A memory of Hayle
A Special Place
Spent several holidays in the chalets on the beach - remember Edna helping the Sellicks - Robert and Anthony and their mum and dad in the Sea Shanty Cafe. Used to get our milk from Mr.Trott at the farm who kept the milk churns in ...Read more
A memory of Branscombe by
Knickerbocker Glories
From when I was about 11 years till 14 approximately my mother and I spent our holidays in Lyme Regis. We would go out on boats fishing for mackerel. I also remember eating Knickerbocker glories at a cafe overlooking the beach and the Cobb. They were delicious!
A memory of Lyme Regis by
Holidays In Lancing
When I was a child we had our annual holiday in Lancing. Mum, Dad and Grandad with my sister and I travelled from Reigate, in Surrey. I remember a kind friend who gave us a lift down until we had our own car to travel in - a ...Read more
A memory of Lancing by
Early Learning
I lived at Winchelsea Beach and attended Winchelsea school which was behind the Church.This was from 1925 to 1930 when my family moved to Eastbourne as a result of the 1928 disaster when the sea breached the shingle and flooded the ...Read more
A memory of Winchelsea
Captions
1,131 captions found. Showing results 577 to 600.
This site is close to a sand and shingle beach. Roof racks were frequently used to carry extra camping
Busy with vendors and visitors and strewn with small boats and sailing craft, Southsea's beach is alive with activity in this Victorian photograph.
The greatest attraction of Perranporth is its extensive beach of golden sand backed by dunes.
Only five minutes from the beach, they are on the coast road which used to be known as the King's Highway - this was a 15th-century common way or track to the local villages.
The cliff line of Dorset breaks to give access to a small cove and the village of Burton Bradstock, with the River Bride gurgling away to the end of Chesil Beach.
The sand-dunes along the east coast of Norfolk can rise to heights of ten metres or more, making access to the beautiful sandy beaches relatively difficult.
These superior chalets are on the sand-dunes above the beach; as estates like this are privately-owned, the roads are usually not made up.
The huts beyond show the popularity of this part of the island for bathing; there are pleasant stretches of sand among the shingle of the beach.
West Pentire can be seen beyond the beach.
The small coves between, such as the beach below Burton Bradstock, would be used mostly by local fishermen and smugglers.
Ice cream and tea are for sale further along the beach. The stall in the centre seems to be selling bottled drinks and perhaps biscuits.
Less than a century after its foundation, the town was already dominating the skyline and its beaches were among the most crowded on the south coast.
Chesil Beach is a great ridge of shingle eight miles long with a lagoon of brackish water between it and the mainland.
In the distance, under a mile away, is Ireland's Eye, a small rocky island with an excellent beach and the ruins of the sixth century St Nessan's Abbey.
The beach is still serviced by a cafe, and a passenger ferry crosses to Padstow at suitable tides.
It boasted four tea-rooms just inland from the beach - they are visible on the right fork of the road in this picture.
Tennis courts, a café and beach huts are situated on the sands reclaimed from the sea beneath the cliffs; down them the steep access lane descends to the Riviera Club.
This schooner may well have been unloading limestone, which was shipped from South Wales to be fired in the lime-kiln that still stands at the side of the beach.
writer noted that 'entrance to the Chine is through a bazaar, where one must either make a purchase or pay sixpence before he descends to this great chasm, echoing the ocean waves that break on the beach
More Americans died training here than were killed on Utah Beach on D-Day.
The beach is shingly, but the bathing is safe. There are a number of excellent country walks in the area, many of them boasting wonderful views across to the Isle of Wight.
Street furniture is changing with the introduction of the ugly concrete street lamp post outside the timber- framed building that was Beach's bookshop.There is a striking coat of arms high up
On Swanage's mixed bathing beach tents were provided for changing and preserving the modesty of visitors.
writer noted that 'entrance to the Chine is through a bazaar, where one must either make a purchase or pay sixpence before he descends to this great chasm, echoing the ocean waves that break on the beach
Places (12)
Photos (191)
Memories (1374)
Books (1)
Maps (115)