Maps

671 maps found.

1900, Newton Ref. RNC791712
1898, Newton Ref. RNE791668
1898, Newton Ref. RNE791671
1896, Newton Ref. RNE791675
1896, Newton Ref. RNE791676
1896, Newton Ref. RNE791681
1898, Newton Ref. RNE791701
1926, Newton Ref. POP791657
1926, Newton Ref. POP791659
Newton, 1924, Newton-In-Bowland Ref. POP791672
1923, Newton Ref. POP791675
1923, Newton Ref. POP791680
1921, Newton Ref. POP791684
1919, Newton Ref. POP791707
1902, Newton Ref. RNC791677
1947, Newton Ref. NPO791668
1947, Newton Ref. NPO791676
1947, Newton Ref. NPO791682
1947, Newton Ref. NPO791707
1946, Newton Ref. NPO791708

Books

1 books found. Showing results 49 to 1.

Memories

218 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.

Living In Kilburn In 60's

We have lived in kilburn most of our lives. Lived in Hilltop Road and Iverson Road in the 60's & 70's. Does anyone remember the Phoenix Youthclub netherwood street. Spent many a great night in there. It ...Read more

A memory of Kilburn by Pauline Newton

Childhood Memories

My family lived at 6 Tynedale Road and my two sisters and I were all born there. We attended Brockham School when Mr. Rogers was the Headmaster. Mr. & Mrs. Foster owned the Sweetshop & Newsagents and I did a paper ...Read more

A memory of Strood Green by Maureen Hollingdale

Newton Garth

I lodged with the farmer and his wife in 1957 approx as groom to their two hunters. Does anyone remember them or their names. I believe there was a daughter aged 2 years.

A memory of Paull by Margaret Allen

Welling, Danson Lane

I was born in 1948 at number 3 Williams Cottages, Danson Lane. These were near the junction of the High Street,. My first memmories are of John Newton Court being built, has anyone any photos of Williams Cottages?

A memory of Welling

Bond Family

I have not been to Whitestone, but my great-great-grandmother...Susannah Bond was born there in 1799. She moved to Newton St. Cyres and married Thomas Crump there. Are there any Bond's still in Whitestone who might be distant relatives ?

A memory of Whitestone by Angela Haddrill

The Clarke Family Of Newton Tracey In The Early 19th Century

Frances “Fanny” Clarke was born about 1810 in Newton Tracey and my interest in both her and the village is because she married Henry Howard, a tin plate worker from Barnstaple. My ...Read more

A memory of Newton Tracey by John Howard Norfolk

National Service And Finding My Wife!

On 3rd of June 1953 I arrived at West Kirby by steam train with a good many other RAF recruits who had been brought to the town to do their recruit training at Royal Air Force Recruit Training School West Kirby ...Read more

A memory of West Kirby by Albert Wm Gosnall

Starting School At Edmondsley Infants

I started Edmondsley school the year before the new build around 1969 the builders used me as the measure for heights of mirrors , doors and other equipment in the school , mr Oakes was our lollipop man! Mr Newton ...Read more

A memory of Edmondsley by dargud01

Childhood Memory Of The 1960 S

My Grandparents Wilfred and Dinah Newton ran the Black Lion pub in the 1960s, I believe, although I do not remember going there. But what I do remember as a 3 or 4 year old is going for a walk with my grandfather ...Read more

A memory of Llanfair Talhaiarn by Diana Clarkson

Holidays On Newton Beach

My Grandmother owned 2 bungalows on Newton Beach, one being a converted bus which was called "The Chalet" and the other was named "Duneside". She lived there between the months of April and October, and I spent all ...Read more

A memory of Newton by gjhanson

Captions

108 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.

Caption For Newton Abbot, From Decoy 1906

As the town grew it spread rapidly across the parishes of Wolborough, Highweek and Newton Bushel, forming the conurbation we see today.

Caption For Newton Abbot, From Decoy 1906

As the town grew it spread rapidly across the parishes of Wolborough, Highweek and Newton Bushel, forming the conurbation we see today.

Caption For Aycliffe, The Green C1955

The resulting industrial estate formed the nucleus in 1947 for the creation of Newton Aycliffe New Town.

Caption For Sudbury, St Leonard's Hospital 1900

The endowment was used to support the new St Leonard's Hospital, which was established in 1867 in Newton Road.

Caption For Grantham, High Street 1904

More survives on the left; in the distance are the pilasters of Newton and Derry's building to give the viewer a point of reference.

Caption For Maiden Newton, High West Street 1906

Maiden Newton stands on the high road between Dorchester and Crewkerne, an old route connecting Dorset with Devon.

Caption For Newton Abbot, Courtenay Park Bowling Green 1907

Courtenay is the family name of the Earls of Devon, who were the major landowners in the area and responsible for much of the Victorian expansion of Newton Abbot.

Caption For Grantham, High Street 1904

More survives on the left; in the distance are the pilasters of Newton and Derry's building to give the viewer a point of reference.

Caption For Leicester, Eastgates 1949

The Gothic Clock Tower, designed by local architect Joseph Goddard in 1868, is decorated with pinnacles and canopies, along with four Leicester worthies including Alderman Gabriel Newton and Simon de Montfort

Caption For Newton Ferrers, From Noss Mayo 1890

This photograph shows a vastly different prospect from that we can see today: the rows of fields on the opposite shore are gone, and the houses of Newton Ferrers extend two-thirds of the way up the hill

Caption For Grantham, Grammar School 1890

This range is now the library and was, as a plaque informs us, where Isaac Newton was a pupil in the 1650s.

Caption For Woolsthorpe, The Village C1955

This is not Isaac Newton's Woolsthorpe, but the village west of Grantham in rolling countryside right on the Leicestershire border; it has fine views of Belvoir Castle a mile away on its hill on the other

Caption For Roseberry Topping, And The Kings Head C1960

It is seventy-five years on from view 18148, and the scene is little changed other than a slight realignment of the track in the foreground, which leads to the centre of the village of Newton

Caption For Sudbury, St Peter's Church 1932

The endowment was used to support the new St Leonard's Hospital, which was established in 1867 in Newton Road.

Caption For Sudbury, The Park C1965

A Georgian house called Belle Vue was built at the foot of Newton Road in the 1780s.

Caption For Colsterworth, The Village C1960

with the houses on the left fronting onto the High Street, which runs left from the signpost, hardly does justice to this large and attractive village in whose part-Norman parish church the great Isaac Newton

Caption For Selborne, The Bostal 1928

It gives an easier climb to the top of the Hanger, and it was a shorter route for Gilbert when he visited his friend Richard Yalden of Newton Valence.

Caption For Woolsthorpe, The Village C1955

This is not Isaac Newton's Woolsthorpe, but the village west of Grantham in rolling countryside right on the Leicestershire border; it has fine views of Belvoir Castle a mile away on its hill on the other

Caption For Grantham, High Street C1955

Beyond it, where the road narrows, is a good building of the 1840s with paired giant pilasters, now Newton and Derry, estate agents.

Caption For London, Westminster Abbey, The Nave Altar C1965

The pulpitum or screen behind the altar is mainly 1828, and the monument in the left recess is to Isaac Newton.

Caption For Grantham, Grammar School 1890

This range is now the library and was, as a plaque informs us, where Isaac Newton was a pupil in the 1650s.

Caption For Colsterworth, The Village C1960

with the houses on the left fronting onto the High Street, which runs left from the signpost, hardly does justice to this large and attractive village in whose part-Norman parish church the great Isaac Newton

Caption For Leicester, Wyggeston Girls School C1950

The distinctive black and white uniforms of both the Wyggeston Boys' and Girls' Schools were in the 1950s and 1960s worn with a pride which said that along with Alderman Newton's School we are among

Caption For Newton Abbot, 1895

Newton Abbot gained in importance in the 19th century by being a railway town.