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Memories
2,048 memories found. Showing results 271 to 280.
Beech House
Beech House was the school attached to St. Augustines,which used to be the County Asylum. I was there from 1964-66. I always found the people of Chartham top be lovely and kind. I remember walks down to the church and mill,and waiting on ...Read more
A memory of Chartham in 1964 by
The Nag''s Head
One didn't have to travel to London in the past to watch pro bands plying their trade. The Nag's Head public house was a much attended venue during the late 1960s and early 1970s for watching many of the (what was then known as) ...Read more
A memory of Wollaston in 1969 by
My First Visit To Eaglesham Church
My first and last visit to Eaglesham church was when i was a schoolboy at lawmuir agricultural school in nearby Jackton. I must add that lawmuir was a boarding school in those days, and pupils went there on a ...Read more
A memory of Eaglesham in 1959 by
Childhood Memories
I moved to Freshford with my family when I was 12 years old and lived at The Inn for 5 years before moving away. We did not have the wall on the end of the building that you see in the foreground. By then a large car park had ...Read more
A memory of Freshford in 1964 by
A Rochdale Childhood
My first memory of Rochdale town hall was seeing the King and Queen on the balcony in 1937 when they were on their coronation tour. Another visitor seen there was Gracie Fields. During my childhood, (1930-1945) I remember ...Read more
A memory of Rochdale in 1945 by
Bathing In The River
Montague terrace was home to many children. I remember the Allen's, John, June, Barry, Hazel, Ivan & Valerie. The White's, Maurice and Barbara, The William,s and Smith,s, Joan, Roy, Margaret, Jeffrey, and at least three ...Read more
A memory of Bishopstoke in 1949 by
Bathing Pool!
I think that this id the boating lake in Old Town. Wonderful memories - trained at RESH 61 - 66.
A memory of Hastings in 1955 by
2 Years In The Village
Sometime around 1956, for about two years, two of us shared a cottage in Iford village (one of the first two as you came off the main road from Lewes). We worked for Mr Robinson milking his Guernsey herd and doing the ...Read more
A memory of Iford in 1956 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
Ashby Aint Like It Used To Be
I was born and bred in Ashby-de-la-Zouch, the eldest of three children. My memories of Ashby itself are snapshots from a time which now seems so old-fashioned that it as nostalgic as a Herriot novel. As a young ...Read more
A memory of Ashby-de-la-Zouch in 1970
Captions
1,059 captions found. Showing results 649 to 672.
In the foreground we can see the roof of Laston House, a purpose-built bath-house which operated between 1810 and the early 1830s.
A Victorian guidebook, published in 1895, described Morecambe thus: 'Morecambe is much frequented by trippers from the busy towns of Lancashire and Yorkshire, for whose recreation are provided abundant
This is the Great Bath after the first excavations and restoration started in 1880: it was originally built in the 1st century AD. The flat bottom is lined with 45 sheets of Mendip lead.
The open-air bathing pool was a new attraction, opened in time for the long hot summer of 1914.
On the right, Archibald Ramsden's bathing machines offer discreet changing facilities.
The Redcliffe had a hydropathic plunge bath on the seaward side of the building, connected to the house by a subway that filled with seawater at high tide.
Copper mining was once a major industrial activity in the locality. However, in Victorian times the town became a popular spa, complete with pump room and baths and around 100 lodging houses.
Anstey's Cove, with Redgate Beach hidden on the left, was a favourite bathing spot for Agatha Christie, who was born in Torquay in 1890.
The sands, which are extensive enough to give the full benefit of ozone to those who avail themselves of its health-giving properties, form an excellent bathing-ground, entirely free from danger.
Taken from the southern corner of Victoria Square, this view shows the promenade just before the Grand Pier was built.
Owing to the frequent heavy seas, the Perch Light, which had stood on Perch Rock since 1683, was often washed away, and so in the 1820s Liverpool Corporation decided to build a more substantial lighthouse
Owing to the frequent heavy seas, the Perch Light, which had stood on Perch Rock since 1683, was often washed away, and so in the 1820s Liverpool Corporation decided to build a more substantial lighthouse
Another delightful view of the Cat Nab area of Saltburn, with the distinctive profile of Huntcliffe beyond.
The Gate, as locals call it, is at Woodgate, by a crossroads in a pleasant rural location between Hanbury and Bromsgrove. The origin of its unusual name is obscure.
Mr and Mrs Potts kept the village shop opposite the mill and on the corner of the A34 and Church Lane. In the 1930s, they also sold day licences for fishing in Radnor Mere in Alderley Park.
This is the Great Bath after the first excavations and restoration started in 1880: it was originally built in the 1st century AD. The flat bottom is lined with 45 sheets of Mendip lead.
The new station was built to replace the original station that had been completed in 1841.
Here we see the marriage of bathing machines and fishing boats under the imposing gaze of the Grand Hotel.
Cleobury, pronounced Clibbery, was once a stronghold of the powerful Mortimer family; they also owned castles in, for example, Ludlow, Wigmore and Chirk.
Unlike many Norfolk beaches, which allowed the erection of permanent wooden beach huts, Gorleston offered a few temporary huts for weekly hire and a 'village' of square tents.
The Crown Inn (left), established in 1652, stands on the corner of the Thoroughfare, with the Cross on the opposite side. The tall building on the left has an Arts and Crafts-style gable and windows.
Oh, we do like to be beside the seaside! These sunseekers are thoroughly enjoying a paddle in the Channel.
Situated in the 270-acre grounds of Cobtree Manor, an Elizabethan house alleged to be the original of Mr Wardell's Dingley Dell in 'Pickwick Papers', this formerly popular family attraction was noted for
The colonnaded street behind, part of the 1789 Bath Improvement Act scheme, is an elegant piece of Georgian town planning.
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