Places
Sorry, no places were found that related to your search.
Photos
5 photos found. Showing results 881 to 5.
Maps
83 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 441 to 450.
Woodthorrpe Road School 1969 73
I have fond memories of being in Mr Birch's class with its big arched window and back stairs where he would lead us for 20 minutes of the Ring Game before lunch. There was a pottery room too but I never saw it used ...Read more
A memory of Ashford by
Larne In 1946 48
Father worked at the Harbour for several years before moving back to London. He was a great rugby player and instigated the building of a Changing Hut on the Rugby Pitch from reclaimed materials and it was christened The Harry Rees ...Read more
A memory of Larne
Ealing1949 To 1963
We moved to Ealing when I was 5 and at 11 I went to NHEHS and we bought the school uniform at Abernethies on the corner of Uxbridge Rd. I loved that area. Next to the taxi rank there was a Polish deli...oh the baked sultana cheesecake. ...Read more
A memory of Ealing by
The Old Days
1960s down the washbrook by the old bridge catching sticklebacks and bullheads. Paddling under the two arches. Playing football on the ice when the brook used to flood into the field next to the brook in winter. Walking the old ...Read more
A memory of Walsgrave on Sowe by
Pictures Of The Suspension Bridge And Clifton College
I was recently given a copy of your delightful book - 'Around Bristol'. I was born just outside Bristol - my parents and brothers survived being bombed in their house in Clifton (I have some ...Read more
A memory of Clifton by
Born In Watford
my memories of Watford start in 1947 when I was born in the front bedroom of our house in Liverpool Road from the 1950s till approx 1968 there is not much I didn't know about the town I first went to school at Watford fields changing ...Read more
A memory of Watford by
Small Place So Much Drama
Llansilin should be the setting for a film or TV serial given the dramatic events that have occured there in relatively recent history. My mother was born in Llansilin in the 1920s and regales me with stories of sad deaths ...Read more
A memory of Llansilin by
Sunday Service
I was looking through pictures on the FF website of Cornwall, especially those of Helston & Tintagel. The picture of this church stirred an embarrassing memory… From the late ‘70’s to the new century, spent many Sumner hols at these ...Read more
A memory of Tintagel by
The Lion & Swan Congleton Cheshire
The Lion & Swan Hotel Congleton Story has it that The Lion & Swan in Congleton was made from ancient timbers, even today there are some solid twelve inch by twelve inch supports on display but who knows where ...Read more
A memory of Congleton by
Oakwood Memories
I lived in Oakwood, then Enfield West, from 1937 till 1946. My father had the Chemists Shop in the Parade, his name was George Reid, and we lived above the shop. Opposite was Victor Sasoon’s Estate, where I think Prisoner of War ...Read more
A memory of Oakwood by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 1,057 to 1,080.
However, it still manages to retain much of its village atmosphere. Its church is at least 13th-century in origin, though the larger part is later medieval.
Holker is very much an estate village for workers on the estate of the Cavendish family, who have been here since 1756.
It is interesting that the little cars and vans looked so much more friendly in these times: they are not ostentatious, and they leave room for these pedestrians and cyclists to roam carelessly
The British School of 1859, demolished in the late 1960s, was much like the National School, now Andover Primary School (C of E Controlled) which still thrives today in lower East Street.
There is a blocked arch under the window, where a chapel has been demolished. The porch has an unusual extra buttress which here masks some of the decoration over the door.
During the 1880s and 1890s there were about 200 hookers registered locally, and as they rarely spent more than twenty-four hours at sea, much of the town's fresh fish was landed from them.
The buildings by the road have been sold off recently and the land, like so much in Mobberley, is being developed for housing.
The civic hall was designed by E Vincent Harris and opened with much ceremony in 1933, with temporary stands being erected for spectators.
The bus advertising E A Beveridge & Co and the cars are of an earlier vintage, but the buildings still look much the same.
The sailing barges look very much at home bottomed- out on the creek mud.
The photogapher was standing in St John's Lane, which leads under the arch into St John's Square.
Today Little Sutton has become a suburb of the much newer town of Ellesmere Port.
Salt was a very important commodity in the past, so much so that salt ('sal' in Latin) was often used as a means of payment for soldiers in the Roman army - hence our words 'salary' today.
Much of this land is now an industrial estate.
The wide main street of the village of Coxwold has not changed much since the days when Laurence Sterne, the author of Tristram Shandy, was vicar from 1760 until his death in 1768.
The scene has not changed too much today, as the suburban growth of New Sarum has stopped short of the site of its neolithic ancestor.
It could be a sign of the times that Curtis & Co on the corner by the arch no longer sell shoes; the premises are presently occupied by an estate agent.
Abingdon's bridges were built in 1416-17 widened in 1820 and substantially rebuilt in 1927; the wide central arch dates from this rebuild.
At the right we can see the medieval arches of St John's Hospital at ground floor level with the sashes of the former Council Chamber above; the stone external staircase was added in 1958.
It burnt down in 1947, and after much debate, the ruins were cleared away in the early 1960s.
In those days railway companies were forbidden from owning passenger ships without Parliamentary approval, a fact not lost on the LB&SCR's arch-rival the London & South Eastern.
The Heath itself is much reduced, but in places you can still find the early spacious villas where they have not been swept away for blocks of flats.
It was there that he started to write his most famous book, 'Dracula', setting much of it in Whitby. Alas! Before the crescent could be completed Hudson's fame and his money ran out.
The stone-built Gothicky Methodist Chapel of 1835 with its pretty arched windows is next to the old school of 1878, now used by the Moulton Theatre.
Places (0)
Photos (5)
Memories (1127)
Books (0)
Maps (83)