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134 photos found. Showing results 541 to 134.
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Memories
540 memories found. Showing results 271 to 280.
From 1940 To 1957
There may be someone who remembers from Strone School, we had some good times in the Second World War, we did not how bad things were in Europe. It was the time we had the RN and the subs in the Holy Loch and ...Read more
A memory of Strone in 1940 by
Memories After The War Years.
I was the eldest of six children,'the Allen Family', and spent all our happiest years in Redcliffe Bay and then Portishead, after coming from Britsol in the 1940s (our family was one of the casualties in the Bristol ...Read more
A memory of Portishead in 1940 by
School Years & First Job
I was born in Lower Cwmtwrch in the 1930s, but my memory of those days is not all that good, well a bit sparse! I was born in Brynderi Bungalow, they tell now that a new school has been built there on the old colliery ...Read more
A memory of Lower Sketty in 1940 by
Whitley Bay Colman Cafe Boarding House On The Esplanade
Does anyone remember a cafe / boarding house on the Esplanade, called Colman or Colman's? It was run by some relatives of mine and I am trying to trace the family tree; I do not know their ...Read more
A memory of Whitley Bay in 1930 by
Some Childhood Years In Sorbie 1932 T0 1937
The family moved from Reay in Caithness to Sorbie in 1932 - I was 2 years old and had a sister who was 12 years old and a brother, 10 years old, so there was a huge difference in ages and I was brought up ...Read more
A memory of Sorbie in 1930 by
Childhood Memories Of Penrhyn Bay
My grandmother and grandfather lived at "Oaklands", in Maesgwyn Road, opposite a corrugated iron church. The road was unmade and beyond the church to the sea was a large meadow where cattle and sheep grazed. On ...Read more
A memory of Penrhyn in 1930
Childhood In Bryn Y Maen
As far as I was concerned there was nowhere else, only what I read or what my parents told me, my life centred around the post office, church, vicarage and Bryn Eglwys, and the neighbouring farms, the lovely views to ...Read more
A memory of Bryn-y-maen in 1930 by
Birth
I was born on 8 October 1939 in a house called Trewalder, at Treyarnon Bay. The house belonged to Nan and Sam Odhams and they persuaded my mother to leave London - everyone was rushing anywhere and every place once war was declared on 3 ...Read more
A memory of St Merryn in 1930 by
The Plough In The 1930''s 40''s
The Plough my Grandad's (Jack Bartram) favourite watering hole, Granny claimed that with the money he spent there it should have belonged to the family. Landlord in those days was Mr Henry Castleman. The bay on the ...Read more
A memory of Byfleet in 1930 by
Playhillocks Cottage
My sister and I were born in Playhillocks Cottage, Longhaven - me in 1937 and my sister in 1936. When I was about 3 or 4 we moved to a council house in Cruden Bay, Serald Street, where my brother was born. In 1950 we migrated ...Read more
A memory of Longhaven in 1930 by
Captions
870 captions found. Showing results 649 to 672.
Situated on the main coast road, this public house is extremely convenient for tourists and the villagers.
This village was once known as Clandon Abbots, for its manor, as in many other Surrey villages, was owned by the local abbey. Here, Chertsey Abbey owned the manor from about 666 AD.
We pass under the River Thames via the Blackwall Tunnel - the northbound side dates from the 1890s, an early project of the LCC, which was established in 1888.
Timber from Scandinavia, with a builder's merchant's lorry and cranes, stand on the Quay beside 1864-built Pier Terrace (right).
The post office is on the far left, and immediately next door is A Shenton, dealing in baby linen and ladies' clothes.
This photograph is taken from the junction of Market Street and Upper Market Street, looking down towards the High Street.
Situated at the southernmost end of the Isle of Thanet, the bay is bounded by cliffs on the north, and by marshes to the south.
The architectural quality falls off somewhat in the southern part of the town. This view looks along the London Road to The Square, with Hinwick Road to the left.
The central part of this prominent building was built in c1750, and the two outer bays were added in the early 19th century. The chapel was added in 1878 and rebuilt after a fire in 1885.
We are looking at the medieval Cobb harbour (centre) from the tennis ground on the cliffs south of Langmoor Gardens.
The triple gables of the early 17th-century house form the centrepiece, with flanking wings. John Ely, a Manchester architect, added the Tudoresque bay window to the right in 1894.
The weavers' cottages (right) are reminiscent of Kersey and Lavenham. They were restored in about 1960, when seven dwellings were reduced to three.
This is the last and most northerly of just over a hundred Martello towers, built to keep Napoleon at bay. This one was constructed well after the invasion threat.
There is safe bathing for children at high tide, protected from the open sea and its waves, behind the North Wall of the harbour.
Passengers boarded vessels at the landing stages to take trips to Colwick Park. A lock linked the river and Nottingham Canal at the projection near the end of the walkway.
The first reference to a slipway on Priory Bay was in 1897.
The brook here somehow appears to be little cared for, with its chipped concrete posts arrayed along weedy banks.
This modest building of red brick is attributed to T H Rushworth and was built in about 1864. The windows are 13th-century and show a variety of designs in two-bay arcades.
After the historic riches of Dunster we descend, physically as in other ways, to Blue Anchor Bay, a seaside resort with a long beach and little character.
The railings of St Mary's churchyard are on the right. In the distance the post office and house remain, but the next house has been demolished.
The bathing machines are doing good business. In the 1720s, it was the custom for those 'taking the waters' to bathe in the sea.
This is a small but pretty bay to the east of Torquay. This view is remarkable for cpaturing bathing machines - the wheeled objects on the left.
Picket fencing encloses the gardens of these two cottages. The nearest cottage has pebble-dash rendering on the walls and a long-straw thatched roof with a traditional swept ridge.
On the right the large bay windows of the clock and electrical shops have been entirely removed.
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