Places
12 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
191 photos found. Showing results 681 to 191.
Maps
115 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 817 to 1.
Memories
1,374 memories found. Showing results 341 to 350.
''''burnham Beeches''''
.... as a little girl, I always remember going here with my Mum, my Aunt Edith and my cousin Dick. Mum would say we are going to 'Burnham Beeches today'. I could never quite understand when we got there, where the sand and sea was ...Read more
A memory of Burnham by
Wonderful Memories Of Great Holidays
When I was around 11 years old in the early '60s we used to go to Chapel every year and stayed in Standish Bungalow. It was owned by my mother's employer who allowed us to go there as a reward for her ...Read more
A memory of Chapel St Leonards by
Memories Of A Convalescent Home
I am interested about a children's convalescent home called, 'Birds Nest and Grange House, 41 Brunswick Square, Herne Bay, Kent. In about 1958/59 as an 8 or 9 year old, my 10 year old sister, ...Read more
A memory of Herne Bay by
The Whitcombs Of Waterloovillle
I have just discovered this site and it was with great pleasure that I read the kind contribution of locals who were born and raised in Waterlooville. My late father was born there in 1916, at The Pines (now a ...Read more
A memory of Waterlooville by
Memory Of Runswick Bay
I was with a group of 8 friends who walked the Cleveland Way some years ago in June. Unfortunately, it was the wettest June for years! The plan that day was to walk from Runswick Bay to Whitby, some 8 miles. We had booked to ...Read more
A memory of Runswick Bay by
Memories Of Mrs. Brown's School Name Somerhill In 21 South Rise Carshalton Beeches Surrey Which Closed In 1969 By David Shamash
MRS BROWN'S SCHOOL WAS LIKE A DAME SCHOOL: YOUNG CHILDREN USED TO GO TO DAME SCHOOLS FOR CHILD CARE AND EDUCATION BEFORE GOING TO SCHOOL BECAME COMPULSORY IN THE LATE NINETEENTH CENTURY. ...Read more
A memory of Carshalton by
Best Years Of My Young Life.
I'm a Polzeath girl (grown woman now ). During the war I lived in Bryher, moved to Yoyo cottage then again to Tywardale. My nursery school was Tregear and primary school was Holiday House on the terrace. The playground was ...Read more
A memory of Polzeath
Radio 1's Tony Blackburn Comes To Polzeath
I have great memories of staying with my Aunt in Polzeath in the mid 1970's. Her house was high up and we used to walk down to the town and to the beach every day. One night in 1977 (late August) the Tony ...Read more
A memory of Polzeath by
Pease Families In America With Roots In Great Baddow
Over here in the United States of America most of the many thousands of Pease family members owe their existence to the brothers Robert & John Pease whose family line lived in ...Read more
A memory of Great Baddow by
Weekend Walks
As a young lad, living in Shepton Mallet, I used to eagerly await my older brother's visits at weekends. Saturdays would often involve a walk to Wells & a matinee at the Regal. If there wasn't a film on we wanted - or I was ...Read more
A memory of Shepton Mallet by
Captions
1,131 captions found. Showing results 817 to 840.
This more distant view also shows the columned enclosure that surrounded the 'squashed onion' domed central bandstand which provided an upper gallery of seating, all set on a projection onto the beach
The unmade road leads from the village to the beach. The sand-dunes are covered with marram grass, which helps knit them together and prevent erosion on this windy coast.
Bathing machines were still very popular at Bognor in 1890 - it was not until the Edwardian era that people changed and swam from the beach.
This is a fine view of the 'lost beach' of Gorleston, so named because after years of erosion it has been reduced to a fraction of the size we see here.
Heacham has the distinctive flat beach of this part of the West Norfolk coast.
With the railway came tourism, first with beach huts, then chalets, and, in the 1950s, caravan sites.
One of the few places on the north coast with access to a fine sandy beach and increasingly popular with surfers, Porthtowan is seen here in its early years of development and is hardly recognisable today
At the beginning of the last millennium, marauding Danes landed on these sandy Devon beaches and put the village of Exmouth to fire and sword.
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.
Hence Rhyl has become noted for the number of children that visit it, and these little ones find an inexhaustible fund of pleasure on its beach. The iron pier was built in 1867.
Once a sleepy Devon backwater, Croyde's beach and bay was discovered by holidaymakers in the 19th century. With two huge caravan parks, this area fills up dramatically in the short summer season.
Posed on Goscar Rock on Tenby's North Beach, these women were paid for their work as models.
There are swings on the beach (extreme left of picture) and tea, refreshments and hot water can be obtained from the café by the roadside.
Traditionally in the ownership of wealthy occupants, the private steps leading down to the beach still belong to these houses, except those on the extreme left.
The groynes on the beach indicate the ferocious tidal currents; in 1931 these currents seriously undermined a row of cottages up the road on the seaward side, that were subsequently
The ice cream shop on the corner is also stocked with plastic beach balls and even a paddling pool.
Then building began in earnest as visitors flocked to enjoy its safe, sandy beach and bracing cliff-top walks. The new town is gathered around an expansive green.
It can be appreciated from this photograph how the bleak area of beach and pools resulted from the infilling of the bay by silt and sand from the china clay industry; the old cliff line
The children are bare-footed, not just because they are on the beach; boots were worn only on Sundays.
Two routes are to be seen in the background leading to the beach. To the right, the private steps (now lost) from the Manor Hotel led to their own promenade.
A family walk down Magazine Lane Slipway onto the beach. This is close to the site of the magazines: ships entering the Mersey had to deposit any gunpowder there during their stay in port.
A row of small fishing boats is drawn up on the beach; they were used to gather shrimps and lobsters. A lifeboat station (left background) was at the ready to cope with any rescue missions at sea.
A hugely expansive beach here means that it never fills up with holidaymakers in this popular resort and former fishing and trading port.
Prior to that it had been little more than a settlement of fishing cottages down by the beach, below the village of Broadwater.
Places (12)
Photos (191)
Memories (1374)
Books (1)
Maps (115)