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Memories
56 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Joshua Joseph Johnson's 3 Daughters And The Buckland Family Of South London
My Great Grandmother had two brothers who lived in Newington or Walworth, South London. This would be the area between Camberwell and Kennington to the South and The Elephant ...Read more
A memory of London by
Family History Kilmorak
In 1807 Janet McGregor of Runuraad, Kilmorak whose father was Alexander McGregor married Peter Robertson (at that time living in Relick, Inverness). They leave to go to Dingwall and then Edderton. Their son Donald goes to ...Read more
A memory of Kilmorack by
Edwin And David T Williams Of 9 School Street, Llanbradach
Hello, this isn't my memory, but that of my grandmother, Jenny Jones as she was then who, as a young girl, was working in service on Ffrwd Farm in Maesycymmer. She was friendly with ...Read more
A memory of Llanbradach in 1910
Some Historical Facts Of The Plumbs In Barroby
The newspaper published at Grantham in England, the original home of the ancestors of the well known Plumb and Parker families of Mills, Pottawattamie, Cass and Shelby Counties, recently carried a ...Read more
A memory of Barrowby by
An Evacuee In 1940
I remember my first home in Westbury Leigh was with a family called Rowe, they seemed fairly old people to me (then a ten year old boy) but now I am eighty I don't suppose they were. One of the brothers, a Charles Rowe, ...Read more
A memory of Westbury Leigh by
My First Day At Work
I can never pass through Maids Moreton without recalling my first day at work as an apprentice electrician for The East Midlands Electricity Board, Buckingham. It was April 14th 1958 and I was assigned to Mr Jack Holland, ...Read more
A memory of Maids' Moreton in 1958 by
Growing Up In No 3 Eardiston View
My name is Derek Hall, the brother to Martin Hall & Pamela Hall, we used to live at No 3 Eardiston View in Menith Wood in the 1960s with our mom Velta Hall. I am now 58 years old living in London with four ...Read more
A memory of Menithwood in 1965 by
Choir Boys
Hello - I was a chorister at the church, I think between 1958/60 as I was born in 1947,o ur family the Schofields lived at no 10 Carville Avenue, Southborough, we were a Christian family. I have only found out by doing family ...Read more
A memory of Southborough in 1958 by
Woodbine Grove
That's my old grammar school and after a disastrous few years trying to learn something useful I eventually got a job with Renown Products in Woodbine Grove. They were manufacturers of pickled onions, vinegar,vacuum salt and various ...Read more
A memory of Penge in 1958 by
Windsor/Eton Town Bridge & Sir Christopher Wren's House
I remember when the old Roadmaster double-deckers used this bridge daily on their run to and from Slough. Now the bridge is closed to road traffic and the vehicles have to detour around the Brocas to access Windsor.
A memory of Windsor in 1900 by
Captions
81 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
Moving south from Grantham, out into the oolitic limestone country towards the Leicestershire border, we reach Skillington; it has a good range of stone houses, and a parish church with some Anglo-Saxon
Moving south from Grantham, out into the oolitic limestone country towards the Leicestershire border, we reach Skillington; it has a good range of stone houses, and a parish church with some Anglo-Saxon
When this picture was taken, Ryton was a pit village in County Durham with no less than five working pits in the immediate vicinity.
St Mary's Church 1907 Moving north-east to the western end of the Sussex Weald, we reach the town of Horsham, which expanded greatly after the railway arrived in 1848.
Seaton is situated on Rutland's south- eastern edge, about half a mile from its border with Northamptonshire, overlooking the Welland Valley.
To the north-east of Allenheads beyond Nookton Fell lies the village of Blanchland. It was here in 1165 that an Abbey Church was founded by the Praemonstratensian Order of monks.
The camera is looking along Church Street, which curves away uphill to the village square of Ticehurst, another Wealden iron-making village.
In the early 19th century there about a dozen windmills in Boston producing flour, and many were on sites that had been used for centuries.
The name Houghton, always pronounced `Hoe`ton`, has its origins in Saxon times, although there is evidence that there was a settlement here before the Roman period.
We are on the navigable and tidal River Arun.The church of St John the Evangelist has a shingled broach spire; flint and stone are used for walling and buildings.A ferry with landing steps connected
Here is a village at ease with itself, in the heart of stone country. On the extreme right is a single-decker bus which would now be an asset to any transport collection.
The church of St Andrew was restored in 1885 and has a shingled broach spire.
The church is featured on the Bayeux Tapestry, that great 11th-century depiction of the Norman Conquest.
Some of the cottages in St Nicholas Terrace, which is located to the north of the church, are 18th-century, and one of them is dated 1771.
High up on the Sussex border stands this ornate Victorian church, whose building was initiated by Viscount Beresford in 1839, but was then taken on by his twenty-year-old stepson Alexander Beresford
High up on the Sussex border stands this ornate Victorian church, whose building was initiated by Viscount Beresford in 1839, but was then taken on by his twenty-year-old stepson Alexander
Sited away from the city centre in the last remaining enclave of 18th-century and earlier buildings, the Cathedral with its fine broach spire of 1862 would hardly wring an awed gasp from even the most
The church of St John the Baptist is mainly 13th-century and has a wood-shingled broach spire. The village has many historic houses.
This is the grandest house in Epsom. It was originally built in the 17th century for Richard Evelyn, the brother of the diarist, and remodelled in stone for Lord Baltimore.
Cistercian monks came from prosperous Fountains Abbey in 1148 to found Sawley, which is three miles from Clitheroe and by the river Ribble.
The Six Bells on the right is the last remaining public house in the village. It was built in the 16th century, and over the years is has been renovated, rebuilt and extended.
At the western end of the Mall is Buckingham Palace, with the massive 1911 memorial to Queen Victoria designed by Sir Thomas Brock and Sir Aston Webb.
Conduit Road runs north from Ock Street on the east side of the Albert Park estate, and the earliest buildings on it are this church group.
The old church had a medieval nave and chancel, and its brick west tower, built around 1800, replaced a medieval timber bell tower.