Places
6 places found.
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Photos
2,394 photos found. Showing results 641 to 660.
Maps
41 maps found.
Books
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Memories
2,822 memories found. Showing results 321 to 330.
I Used To Live Here
I was born in this lovely village but moved when I was about 3 years old. My great-grandmother Dorothy Thomas lived in Ty Llwyd, a small cottage on the road facing the sea front. I remember looking out of the window at night ...Read more
A memory of Ferryside by
Playtime
I can remember my nan coming over to the school and passing me and my sister sweets through the fence at playtime. She lived in a cottage opposite the school. I also remember the great Guy Fawkes Night over by the pond and the hot ...Read more
A memory of Burgh Heath in 1956 by
The Boat Club, Acton Bridge
Laurie, I remember vividly those days as if they were yesterday, strange to see the Jan mentioned which dad bought from the Faircloughs which was moored at Widnes Docks.Do you remember our trip down the ship canal ...Read more
A memory of Acton Bridge by
James Cook
Hi to all, for the past twenty-two years my wife Sheila and myself have brought our family to Staithes on holiday twice a year, around February and October time. We stayed in many of the wonderful cottages on offer - FORDSIDE, ...Read more
A memory of Staithes by
Withycombe Village
In the Second World War my brother and I were evacuated to my grandmother's in Withycombe village, she lived in a cottage opposite the Country Inn. We went to the village school down near the Hollybush Inn. I have fond memories ...Read more
A memory of Exmouth in 1940
Walnut Cottage
My Grandparents ran the post-office at Moorland when I was young, we used to visit every Sunday. I loved the atmosphere and the peacefulness of the village. My grandad was Charles Kitch, also named 'Fido', but I can't find out why. ...Read more
A memory of Moorland in 1962 by
Binbrook, The Holiday And Life.
Onwards and upwards through the years, I had an aunty and grandmother who lived there. Ending up at No2 Mount pleasant after living in Low Lane. Lilly and Bill Stone, parents of my mother Jaqueline Stone (now ...Read more
A memory of Binbrook in 1956 by
Fullers Arms
I used to visit the Fullers Arms in Brightling on my motor cycle, starting at the Banks Cottages and making the circle around the reservoir to Brightling, then to Dallington, and then Netherfield and finally to Johns Cross. It made a nice evening's ride and I had a few beers, happy days.
A memory of Brightling in 1951 by
Broadlads Estate
My grandfather farmed Bushey Leazes farm on the Broadlands estate until his retirement. I loved that farm, playing in hay lofts, milking the cows, they had guard geese that would come down the long lane from the farm and not let ...Read more
A memory of Romsey in 1949 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
Captions
2,020 captions found. Showing results 769 to 792.
Lace-making has always been an important tradition in East Devon, though it would be a rare sight today to see it carried out in the street by a local cottager.
Fashionable hotels soon lined the front, with villa residences and smart cottages being erected along the slopes of Sid Vale to cater for a dramatic increase in the resident population.
Lying at the foot of wooded limestone slopes to the east of Cringlebarrow, these rendered stone cottages, with pronounced dripstones protecting their windows and doorways from the rain, are typical of
Some new homes were built, and older cottages were converted into more luxurious accommodation.
The terrace of cottages in Allotment Lane has ragstone walls and a brick main façade; there is a low pediment at the centre with an arched window.
In the distance on the right, the delightful Flemish weavers' cottages still exist today.
Generally regarded as the prettiest village in Surrey, this delightful picture of two small girls beneath the venerable oak trees, against a backdrop of some of the picturesque cottages at the heart of
Already falling into disrepair in Victorian times, thatched cottages on the east side of South Street, beside South Bridge, would soon succumb to the front-line of urbanisation.
Both are delightful, with old Devon cob cottages and attractive gardens in an area of fine scenery. It is hard to imagine the crowded streets of Plymouth only a few miles away.
Today the cross is shaded by trees, but the cottage behind, known as Well House, is still recognisable.
Here we see Great Brington's picturesque stone and thatched cottages.
Peeping into view above the rooftops of these cottages, now sadly gone, is the elegant spire of St Katherine's Church, one of the tallest in the county.
The mostly 15th-century church of St Nicholas rises above the narrow street of stone cottages.
Thomas Hardy was born in this cottage in 1840 and wrote his first three novels whilst living there. He retained an interest in the family home until the end of his life.
This beautiful cottage still stands, largely unaltered apart from a little pruning of the creeper on the walls and the trees to the left.
Stoney Cottage, the jettied, timber-framed building on the left, was saved from demolition and restored to one dwelling c1965.
The village was an important market town when neighbouring Budleigh Salterton consisted of a few scattered fishermen's cottages.
The second cottage on the left is now the library.
Nowadays it is a prosperous commuting area, and modern semis punctuate the old stone cottages.
Low, single-storey whitewashed cottages face up to the marine elements.
At the time of this photograph, the population of the village had almost halved: local cottage industries had declined, and the arrival of the new mills in the larger towns meant that people flocked
Some fine old cottages and a pond border the large green and common.
Delightful dark brown granite cottages hug the narrow choked streets of Mousehole (pronounced Mouzel).
The building on the left, now demolished and replaced by St Thomas's Church Hall, was a cottage for the tannery workers.
Places (6)
Photos (2394)
Memories (2822)
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Maps (41)