Places

4 places found.

Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Photos

59 photos found. Showing results 81 to 59.

Books

Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.

Memories

230 memories found. Showing results 41 to 50.

Lawrence Weston Comprehensive School

I attended Lawrence Weston Comprehensive School from September 6, 1963 until February 1969. Although I had passed my 11 Plus examination very highly (highest in the southwest of England) and wanted to go ...Read more

A memory of Lawrence Weston in 1963 by Timothy Purnell

What An Education!

It's pity that there are no images of Cannock's schools on this archive. Cannock actually had a number of schools long before many other towns. Primary education for all didn't come into effect until the Education Act of 1870 made it ...Read more

A memory of Cannock by brucehaycock

Cambridge Terrace Shops

Bush Hill Park had so many interesting characters back in the 70's when I was young. I loved going to the shops in Cambridge Terrace, just off Dehli Road. My favourite one was Stewart's, the sweet shop, owned by Harry ...Read more

A memory of Bush Hill Park in 1972 by Sharon Kenealy

Bromley High Street

I remember the coffee smell as one wandered up the high street. Someone on this memory board has asked what was it called. It was called: Coffee Importers, because that was what they did. You could buy beans or have them ground there ...Read more

A memory of Bromley by Susan Tebby

St Bedes

I was born and bred in Ormskirk and attended St Anns School in Hants Lane. When I was 12, St Bedes School opened and I went there. I remember it being very big compared to St Anns. Mr Collange was the Headmaster, other teachers were Mr ...Read more

A memory of Ormskirk in 1957 by Margaret Dickinson

My Local Church

This is the church in Warren Road where l was christened in 1956, and sat through many a Sunday morning service. The vicar's name was Mr Carey. I used to attend monthly church parades with the Brownies and then the Guides, and my brother ...Read more

A memory of Nork in 1956 by Patricia White

One Day At A Time

A precised extract from the chapters in my biography relating to wartime evacuation, and particularly to Garnant. I stared morosely out of the window and watched the landscape slip by as the steam train chugged its way through ...Read more

A memory of Garnant in 1940 by James Tait

Just A Few Memories

My sister, Mary, was born in 1946, where I was born 1949. She'd take me on the bus from Royston to see some films at the Staincross cinema. The only thing that I remember was that it was somewhat run down but yet had a feel about ...Read more

A memory of Darton in 1959 by Roland Mitchell

The Wire Trellis

I was something of a naughty boy back in those years: there were four of us young lads who were to bus it to Barnsley from Royston where we were barely old enough to go sampling Barnsley Bitter. If we were sixteen let alone eighteen ...Read more

A memory of Barnsley in 1965 by Roland Mitchell

Monkton Riding Stables

Mr Lodge who was blacksmith and farrier to the stable which his daughter Elaine owned would allow me to watch him work at the forge: one day whilst he was fashioning a horseshoe which was white hot, he had placed it ...Read more

A memory of Royston in 1961 by Roland Mitchell

Captions

127 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.

Caption For Barnstaple, Haymaking 1890

Hay is being gathered at Chestwood buy horse power; traffic on the A39, which now roars across the valley below, is a mere nightmare for the future.

Caption For St Ives, On The Beach 1890

The children are bare-footed, not just because they are on the beach; boots were worn only on Sundays.

Caption For St Austell, Crinnis Beach C1955

The old cliff line is protected by a wide expanse of sand, and the highest tides barely surround Crinnis Island.

Caption For Feckenham, High Street C1967

In fact, Feckenham was virtually a town when Redditch was barely even a village.

Caption For Morecambe, Central Promenade C1950

Barely 50 years later, the scene is altogether different.

Caption For Pleshey, View From The Church Tower C1965

The castle here had fallen into decay by Shakespeare's time: in 'Richard II', he mentions its “empty lodgings and unfurnished walls, unpeopled offices, untrodden stones”.

Caption For Eastleigh, Leigh Road C1960

The front of the National Provincial Bank, now the National Westminster, has barely changed since 1960.

Caption For Rhyl, The Beach And The Pier 1913

The bucket and spades, bare feet, donkeys and wickerwork basket chairs recapture a vanished era.

Caption For Ilkley, View Of Swastika Stone 1916

Overlooking Ilkley is the Swastika Stone, so called because of its attractive engraved markings; in reality, they barely resemble the emotive 20th-century swastika symbol.

Caption For Morfa Nefyn, The Bay 1930

With barely enough wind to keep under way, small craft lie just offshore.

Caption For Fittleworth, Lea Hill 1908

The chestnut coppice in this view has recently been cut, and the hill is comparatively bare.

Caption For Plympton, St Mary's Church 1898

It was restored in 1868 by Ewan Christian, an act which Rev Sabine Baring Gould described as 'cruel'.

Caption For Braunton, Old House Church Street 1900

Every one of the well-dressed children wears a hat: only the rather scruffy boy to the left is bare headed.

Caption For Ystrad Mynach, The Village 1938

This picture, taken just where the A469 road to Bargoed turns to the left, shows what a diversity of shops and amenities existed in a town of barely 5,000 inhabitants.

Caption For Menheniot, Church 1912

Wall plaster has since been removed to reveal bare stonework.

Caption For Brean Down, 1918

It is a relief to reach the archaeologically rich and beautiful headland of Brean Down, a carboniferous limestone outlier of the Mendips reaching 300 feet high, from whose bare grassy slopes are

Caption For Great Easton, The Village C1960

In an area of architectural gems (Rockingham Castle, Lyddington Bede House and Stoke Dry parish church), the village has a number of good ironstone houses of the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries

Caption For Dodington, The Hall 1929

Partly bare stone and partly whitewashed, and with numerous stone-mullioned windows, its cross passage is behind the two-storey porch.

Caption For Huddersfield, The George Hotel, St George's Square 1957

He also built the station - a great achievement for a man who could barely write his own name.

Caption For Bidborough, The Hare And Hounds C1965

The village pub, the Hare and Hounds, has barely changed since this photograph was taken 35 years ago.

Caption For Windsor, Castle, St George's Chapel, Princess Charlotte Memorial 1895

Above, the Princess ascends to heaven, one breast bare; she is accompanied by two angels, one holding the stillborn baby, the other with crossed arms.

Caption For Waddesdon, The Manor, West Front 1897

Lodge Hill was then a bare hill, but the Baron imported vast numbers of mature trees to give it its present wooded character; teams of horses toiled from far and wide to haul the trees to their destination

Caption For Polegate, The Crossing C1965

Polegate barely existed until the railway arrived in 1846; initially it was the station for Eastbourne, connected to it by a horse omnibus.

Caption For Crosby, The Windmill C1960

Substantial tree growth has filled the gaps around the dwelling house in our picture, and the height of the trees has rendered the windmill barely visible from Moor Lane.