Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Muir Woods, USA
 - Wood Green, Greater London
 - Paddock Wood, Kent
 - Ashurst Wood, Sussex
 - Petts Wood, Greater London (near Orpington)
 - Hinchley Wood, Surrey
 - Bishop's Wood, Hereford & Worcester (near Ross-on-Wye)
 - Cousley Wood, Sussex
 - Wood's Green, Sussex
 - Cannock Wood, Staffordshire
 - The Wood, Shropshire (near Wem)
 - Wood's Corner, Sussex
 - Wood, Dyfed
 - Wood, Somerset
 - Baker's Wood, Buckinghamshire
 - Booth Wood, Yorkshire
 - Bishops Wood, Staffordshire
 - Prees Wood, Shropshire
 - Codsall Wood, Staffordshire
 - Gipton Wood, Yorkshire
 - Harold Wood, Essex
 - Higham Wood, Kent
 - Holt Wood, Dorset
 - Renshaw Wood, Shropshire
 - Ticket Wood, Devon
 - Radmore Wood, Staffordshire
 - Wollerton Wood, Shropshire
 - Wood Bevington, Warwickshire
 - Wood End, Hertfordshire
 - Wood Green, Norfolk
 - Wood Lane, Shropshire
 - Wood Norton, Norfolk
 - Edzell Woods, Grampian
 - Gustard Wood, Hertfordshire
 - Lyneal Wood, Shropshire
 - Knowl Wood, Yorkshire
 
Photos
1,098 photos found. Showing results 521 to 540.
Maps
789 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 625 to 4.
Memories
2,407 memories found. Showing results 261 to 270.
When We Were Kids
When we were kids in Fishcross we used to go fishing most weekends, play in the woods, go to the Dam, climb and fish the Ochill Hills, Tooks Pond for eggs, go to the pictures etc. I knocked about with Charlie and John Bradley, Big ...Read more
A memory of Fishcross in 1948 by
Welbeck Colliery Village Now Know As Meden Vale
My Grandparents moved to Welbeck Colliery Village about 1926, when my mother was 10 years old, and stayed in the same house at the bottom of Elkesley Road until they went into care in the 1970s. My ...Read more
A memory of Meden Vale by
Balloon Woods Wollatton
Balloon Woods. Most people says it was a hell hole. Yes some parts of it was. But to a child it was good. There were more quite a few blocks. Some had four floors, these were called Tansley Walk, Bealey Walk, Hartington Walk ...Read more
A memory of Wollaton in 1971 by
Pastures Avenue, Nottingham
I remember Clifton in a different light. We lived at 17 Pastures Avenue during 1966/7, my brother or one of them, he's the youngest, was born there. I met my half sisters and brothers there. I have always liked ...Read more
A memory of Newark-on-Trent in 1967 by
Number 1 Kersemill Cottages
I started being accident prone at an early age it seems. My parents lived at the above cottages with me and my big sister. My dad was a meal miller and worked at the meal mill just up the the road to the right I think, ...Read more
A memory of Kersemill in 1956 by
Childhood Days
I too have happy and sad memories of Thurnscoe. I started school in 1952 at Hill Infants. Mrs Cartlidge was our teacher. I still remember where I sat behind the door and being given a small blackboard and chalk on my first day there. ...Read more
A memory of Thurnscoe in 1952
Cookridge Once Fields And Farms
I moved from Holbeck in 1948 into one of the first estates to be built in North West Leeds, Ireland Wood (Raynels). In 1950 I went to Cookridge School, then a wooden hut right slap bang opposite where Cookridge fire ...Read more
A memory of Cookridge in 1950 by
Farm At White Hill
My father Jenkin Evans and mother Valerie Evans lived at Potters Cross Farm, White Hill, Kinver from just before the Second World War. This is the farmhouse which you can see which still exists to this day. They raised four children, ...Read more
A memory of Kinver by
Happy Days
I have many fond memories of Bodiam and the Castle, from when I was 1 year old in 1943, until I was 15. Along with dear Mum and my two sisters, our whole extended family on my mum's side consisting of several families would move to Bodiam, ...Read more
A memory of Bodiam in 1950 by
The Dreaded Climb Up The Hill
When I was a lad, my mum would take me shopping in Folkestone's town centre. Probably to Sainsbury's in Sandgate Road, Timothy Whites, etc. Being that we lived Wood Avenue area, we would walk down Dover Road & ...Read more
A memory of Folkestone in 1953 by
Captions
663 captions found. Showing results 625 to 648.
Kippax Colliery near Owl Wood flourished between 1858 and 1904, but it was the nearby pits of Allerton Bywater (1875-1992) and Ledston Luck (1909-1987) that transformed the village into the town
Ascending the precipitous, winding track through the box woods from Burford Bridge on the River Mole below, on a cumbersome safety bicycle while clad in the heavy clothing of the day must have been hard
Its many buildings were gradually taken over by other businesses: during the General Strike of 1926 the wood mill supplied 500 police batons; later it became Oxley's Mineral Water factory, and in 1943
The statue of John Cobden can been seen in the middle of the square: this bronze statue, by Marshall Wood, was paid for by public subscription and was presented to the town on 23 April 1867 by the President
The castellated entrance to Townley Hall, on the A671 Todmorden Road at Burnley Wood, was photographed when it was still a private estate.
On the roof over the main entrance to the Gallery is an allegorical statue of Liverpool, by John Warrington Wood.
Also within this very small area is Billesdon Coplow, a prominent wooded hill, and within its lee Botany Bay fox covert, which is thus clearly dated soon after 1788, when the infamous penal colony was
Until the 19th century it would seldom have been visited by the outsider; its deep wooded valleys, chalk downlands and secluded heaths form a physical and mental barrier to the intruder.
William Halliday - a self-taught wood carver - lived there. His work was exhibited at the Great Exhibition, and can be seen around the city and in the cathedral.
Anyway, October 1938, the time of the Munich crisis, was not a good time for people to go in for speculation.
Fire was an ever-present danger with so many premises built from wood.
Among discoveries made are a coin found in Wolverton by Galleon's Wharf; a ring brooch at Bury Lawn, Great Linford; a clay weight for a weaving loom at Pennyland; a spearhead near Rickley Wood
Until the 19th century it would seldom have been visited by the outsider; its deep wooded valleys, chalk downlands and secluded heaths form a physical and mental barrier to the intruder.
millennium, it is now time to update the town centre's image by developing high quality, long lasting Visionary Buildings and Open Spaces During the severe flooding in September 1958, bits of wood
landscape with such a deep heritage, the National Trust has considerable parts of the area under its care, notably Alderley Edge, and Styal with its Mill, accompanying village and walks in the woods
The roof is chestnut wood, and on the shields between the ribs are carved emblems of the Passion.
A few years later the octagonal shaft was found by a Mr Coode, the owner of Badash Farm.
A few years later the octagonal shaft was found by a Mr Coode, the owner of Badash Farm.
During the time leading up to the First World War (1914-18), a number of food shortages, popularly referred to as famines, hit Barrow-in-Furness.
many coastal towns where creeks and estuaries were formed, the people of Fareham used the sea to extract salt, which before the days of refrigeration was an essential ingredient in preserving food
It is likely that the early monks used it as a source of food. Now it is one of Dorset's best known tourist attractions.
It has since been a newsagents and video rental shop, and is now a fast food outlet for USA Chicken.
The hostel at Inglesham was modest compared to some, but still provided all the needs of food and bed for the weary Cotswold explorer.
The small, busy, individually owned shops of this period have now disappeared; they have become mostly restaurants with an Indian theme and fast food outlets - and one is a topless dancing bar.
Places (165)
Photos (1098)
Memories (2407)
Books (4)
Maps (789)

