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Photos
12 photos found. Showing results 781 to 12.
Maps
9,582 maps found.
Books
30 books found. Showing results 937 to 960.
Memories
4,597 memories found. Showing results 391 to 400.
Ward End Adult School
The Ward End Adult School was held on Sunday mornings in 'The Barn', St.Margaret's Road, Ward End before the 2nd World War. It was run on a sort of religious basis, like a church (non-denominational, I think, but similar to ...Read more
A memory of Ward End in 1930 by
2up And 2down!
My father was born in Ford Street Hockley Brook Birmingham in 1936. He was the youngest of 6, 2 sisters and 3 brothers. Ford Street consisted of a row of houses on one side and factories on the other side. The houses were 2 up and 2 ...Read more
A memory of Birmingham in 1940 by
Wouldham 1946 49
Hi, I was born in Wouldham, 3 Castle Street, in 1946 and my family moved away in 1949 but I had a memory of the house that stayed with me all my life. The memory is of a tree in the garden that had a swing that my dad used to push ...Read more
A memory of Wouldham by
Clements Hall Childrens Home
My memory of Hockley is staying in a children's home called Clements Hall in 1960/5. It was near a few orchards where we would go scrumping for our midnight feasts. It really was a great place to stay as a kiddy. We had ...Read more
A memory of Hockley in 1960 by
Twelve Happy Months
I was born in Nant Gwynant in 1925 and lived there for the first 20 years of my life. In 1944 I was drafted into the army and served in German and Italy. Upon release in 1947, I decided to try and make a career in agriculture ...Read more
A memory of Nantgwynant by
Crosby Rosedale Aveune
I was born in my grandparents' home in Rosedale Avenue in July 1947. I remember Crosby well, the cinema at the top of Endbutt Lane, going to church at St Peter and St Paul's RC Church, seeing the Beatles, and here I am in 2010 ...Read more
A memory of Crosby in 1947 by
Love That Place!
Born at Petersfield in 1940, my first home was Berry Cottage, down Sandy Lane, opposite Sibley's farm. Berry cottage had only 4 rooms (2 up and 2 down), no running water, only a well and later a tap down in the lane. I remember the ...Read more
A memory of Rake Firs in 1940 by
Growing Up In Easebourne
I went to live in Cowdray House, aged 4, in 1951. My father worked in the accounts office in Easebourne village, and I attended Easebourne Primary School (Headmaster was Mr Bevan) along with Barbara Fisher, who also lived ...Read more
A memory of Easebourne in 1956 by
Colerne In The Second World War Continued
Those of us at Colerne school who passed our 'scholarship' exam at the age of about eleven usually went on to Chippenham Secondary School, which probably goes under a different name now: it's at Hardenhuish, ...Read more
A memory of Colerne in 1940 by
1962/63 Best Time Of My Childhood
I can't believe this, amazing even if the names are coincidence, I was at Warnham Court 1962-63, I can remember lots of names: Roy Riggs, with his 'German' dictionary. June Palmer. John Thorp, we ...Read more
A memory of Warnham Court School in 1962 by
Captions
1,673 captions found. Showing results 937 to 960.
We can also see the remains of the breakwater, which by 1870 had become the subject of a wrangle between Tynwald and the Imperial Government that was not resolved until 1879.
The house has now gone, and the bridge has been replaced by another. This photograph was taken in Lower Monk Street near the weir in Swan Meadows.
with a brass plate on it on which the following was inscribed: 'Whoso is hungry, and lists well to eat, Let him come to Sprotbrough, for his meat, And for a night and for a day, His horse shall have both
Taken a few years after photograph 34748, this splendid view shows both flight and boats. The furthest boat is a steam-powered tug, which will move the immaculate coal-laden barge.
The Victoria Club for Working Men in the west corner of Kingsbury is another benefaction from the Rothschilds, in this case Baron Ferdinand of Waddesdon.
King John ordered new kitchens to be built both here and at Marlborough. 'In each kitchen shall be made a hearth for the cooking of two or three oxen'.
The Ulverston Canal was opened in 1796 to connect the town with the Leven Estuary, and to enable trade, both exports and imports, to be increased.
The bypass on the south side of town was opened in 1926; it was much needed to relieve the narrow streets of both local china clay and through traffic.
The prosperity of the North Wales coastline grew steadily during the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Here we see another reconstructed church, this time the responsibility of the Luftwaffe.
Another view of Slapton Sands, this time looking north. The sea wall is a little more substantial today, otherwise the view is unchanged.
Another harvest from the fen was buckthorn, vital for charcoal, which was used in making explosive fuses during the Second World War.
Here on the left is the old post office before it moved to the Green. The library beside it has now expanded to fill the whole building.
On the right is a half-timbered building that houses a bank.
This is another nostalgic picture of steam in the Peak District. It has gone now: but for how long?
The camera is looking along Church Street, which curves away uphill to the village square of Ticehurst, another Wealden iron-making village.
brass plate on it on which the following was inscribed: 'Whoso is hungry, and lists well to eat, Let him come to Sprotbrough, for his meat,And for a night and for a day, His horse shall have both
Both thrive to the present day. The first hotel, built about 1851, still stands to the east of the old railway station, and is used by British Rail as offices.
The house has now gone, and the bridge has been replaced by another. This photograph was taken in Lower Monk Street near the weir in Swan Meadows.
Both are long gone, although smaller firms and businesses occupy those same sites today.
At the opening of the first motorway bridge thirty years earlier, Enoch Williams was reported to have said to an interviewer that traffic would increase to such an extent that another bridge would
Another harvest from the fen was buckthorn, vital for charcoal.
Another view of the High Street at a less congested point and on a very hot and sunny summer's day: the shopkeepers have lowered their sun-blinds to protect their wares, and the lady on the left has
Often you can walk for miles in its foothills without meeting another person.
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