Places
12 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Bowling, Strathclyde
- Bowling, Yorkshire
- Bowling Green, Shropshire
- Bowling Green, Gloucestershire
- West Bowling, Yorkshire
- Bowling Alley, Hampshire
- Bowling Bank, Clwyd
- Bowling Green, Hampshire
- Bowling Green, West Midlands
- Bowling Green, Cornwall (near St Austell)
- Bowling Green, Hereford & Worcester
- Bowling Green, Cornwall (near Callington)
Photos
645 photos found. Showing results 41 to 60.
Maps
70 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
480 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Ynysddu Crusaders
My grandfather Robert John Roberts, born 1895, joined The Ynysddu Crusaders. When I came to visit from Portsmouth, he took me to watch them play. My father Donald Keith Roberts played football, bowls and cricket. He would be very ...Read more
A memory of Ynysddu in 1920 by
Wrong Date
I attended the Kettering Grammar school until 1961, the main school being in Bowling Green Road. The science block was in Windmill Ave (shown in photo) but most of the buildings seen here were not erected in 1960. The block seen at the far ...Read more
A memory of Kettering by
Wrexham Memories
I was born in Wrexham and spent the first 10 years of my life living in Bryn Estyn Rd, Rhosnesni. I attended Covent School, Gerald Street, then Borras Park Junior. I then went to Bromfield School where my dad was a teacher. A lot of my ...Read more
A memory of Wrexham by
Working At The Bowling Alley
Having returned from Australia, I got a job as controller 4 nights and Sundays, it was a great scene, what with the disco downstairs, the bar upstairs, a barber shop, restaurant, 24 lanes, and a juke box with great ...Read more
A memory of Cippenham in 1966 by
Working In Southall
Although I had known Southall from a very young age, I was born and grew up in Greenford, but my grandmother and an aunt lived in Southall, in Woodlands Road, so my earliest recollections occurred around 1950, when I was 5 years ...Read more
A memory of Southall in 1970 by
Woolwich Markets 1940s
I used to lived in Eltham from 1940 until 1951 - before that it was Plumstead. I visited Woolwich Markets numerous times. My last school was Woolwich Politechnic just a stroll away. I recall eating eel soup at fourpence a bowl ...Read more
A memory of Woolwich in 1950 by
Wood End Schools
Both my wife and I went to Wood End schools. In our day, a girl who did not pass the 11+ exam would spend her whole school life in the one school, going through Nursery, Infants, Junior and Senior schools. As there were no senior ...Read more
A memory of Northolt in 1948 by
Wishaw
I was sent to live with my grandparents John and Teen (Christine) McIndoe in Wishaw at the start of theSecond World War. They lived at 62 East Academy Street, and when old enough I attended East Academy Street School. I loved that ...Read more
A memory of Wishaw in 1940 by
Wish I Could Remember More.
I too remember the bowling alley, and the Odeon cinema, the bus station, and the drip teacakes, and cups of hot tea,
A memory of Halifax by
Willington.Co. Durham.
I was brought up by my parents, Tom and Norah Hill in Willington, along with my 5 siblings. We moved from North Terrace to Brown Avenue on Dene Estate. I often went to play on the swings and top-hat just outside the Miners ...Read more
A memory of Willington by
Captions
169 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
Helston's Bowling Club was founded in 1760, and the green was laid in 1764.
Cannock does, however, possess one of the finest bowling greens in the country, which has been in use for nearly two hundred years.
The bowling pavilion on the right, and some of the local housing is in the background.
The thatched bowls pavilion in the distanct was built in 1923; gates inot the park commemorate the parks opening by the Lord Mayor of London in October 1892.
Withnell Fold's Sports and Social Club is still going strong, with facilities for tennis, hockey and bowls, as well as cricket.
But as popular motoring increased, tea-shops such as The Flower Bowl, seen here, sprang up to cater for visitors and local residents alike.
The bowling green is surrounded by beach huts and set amidst suburbia in St Edmund's Road, with Cordy's Regal restaurant, now The Alex, to the right.
1925 saw a part of the south green made into a bowling green, and three years later a rather rough, but functional putting- green was made next to it.
Today its shadow falls on peaceful pursuits such as a game of bowls.
Cattle graze the green outside the Punch Bowl Inn at Low Row in Swaledale.
The village bus is setting off for Looe outside the famous Punch Bowl Inn, which is said to have been used for the distribution of goods by smugglers.
Meetings of another sort take place behind the hall, where there is also a bowling green.
Premises were amicably shared with the Bowls Club.
Just behind the memorial the flat area of ground is a bowling green, with today a fine new clubhouse just beyond.
Below Plymouth Hoe, where legend tells us that Sir Francis Drake played that famous game of bowls, is a promenade for strolling or lounging on deckchairs.
Below Plymouth Hoe, where legend tells us that Sir Francis Drake played that famous game of bowls, is a promenade for strolling or lounging on deckchairs.
By 1909 a splendid bowling green was a new attraction, and in 1949 new greenhouses were constructed.
Here, only a peddler's humble donkey waits to cross from the Bowling Green towards the gable end of the Tudor Alleyn's School.
Perhaps the climb is worth it for another reason: the view over handsome Georgian streets and the vast green bowl of hills around the town.
Visitors paid an entrance fee, the entertainments were free: tennis, quoits, bowling, croquet, hobby horses, swings, and brass band concerts.
This rose garden was the site of Hawhill Park's first bowling green.
Yew trees lead to the church door, and inside is a Norman font with an arcaded bowl resting on four pillars.
The inn is now closed; at one time there was a bowling green nearby from which it may have taken its name.
There seems to be some dispute as these players pose on the bowling green, while a small audience of no doubt critical ladies watches close to them.
Places (12)
Photos (645)
Memories (480)
Books (0)
Maps (70)