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Recollections Of Llangwyfan Hospital
I am not too sure I can be the only one to contribute, but am glad to do so.i was a patient in 1959 as a young lad with tb and was so desolate to be away from my home and family,it is very clear in mind now all ...Read more
A memory of Llangwyfan by
Reading The Last Letter Of The Cadets
I was to march that day as well. My friend and I both went to the dockyard that morning. My friend's name was Peter Jerard, we were told we could not march because our new suit had not come in and we were ...Read more
A memory of Chatham by
Re The Buffs
The Royal order of Buffalos..... Next door but one to the nurses home (as was), now a nursing home. I was born in Highfield hospital, Mill Lane, lived in Wallasey until I was 62 and now live in the north of Scotland. When I was a ...Read more
A memory of Wallasey in 1993 by
Publc Baths
my granddad ran the swimming /slipper /public baths his name was Talbot I learned to swim there as dad was an instructor. I went to the school across the road Any one who knows more get in touch thank you
A memory of Gainsborough by
Privateers And Pirates
The Llandoger Trow - It is rumoured that Daniel DeFoe had met Alexander Selkirk ( shipwrekced sailor who had been rescued by a Bristol ship) in the Llandoger, on whose story he based his book 'Robinson Crusoe'. The ...Read more
A memory of Bristol by
Picture Clarification
The picture, named The Parade, fails to identify The Parade. The window blinds that can be seen through the foliage to the left is where The Parade actually is. It's a short piece of road that held four shops, the first a ...Read more
A memory of Smallfield in 1930 by
Pencillin The Cure
It is not widely known but the first time penicillin was used successfully was when it was used on a fourteen year old boy to save his left leg. He had a badly infected leg and was in fact dying with because of the fast ...Read more
A memory of Bredfield
Part 7
There was no running hot water, no gas, no bathroom and no flushing toilets. Electricity was used for lighting and if you were lucky, a wireless set. Most sets were run from accumulators, a sort of battery, which you had to take to ...Read more
A memory of Middle Rainton in 1945 by
Part 16
Conclusion On my last visit it was hard to see where the village was. The small triangular field is now a park but it looks so small. The place I remember seemed so much larger than Small Park that is now there. Having been raised ...Read more
A memory of Middle Rainton in 1945 by
Part 13
He then ran a wet fish trade from a horse and cart, but also ran a fish and chip shop. Last time I was in Houghton the fish shop was still there. In Newbottle Street, just up from the school and on the same side. Gran was very ...Read more
A memory of Middle Rainton in 1945 by
Captions
1,059 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.
A wonderful evocative scene of people enjoying themselves on the pond; note in particular the boat with a canopy.
From the beginning of the 19th century most resorts had bathing machines in which bathers could change while being dragged into the sea, initially by horses and later by winches.
A large crowd gathers around Edward Perkins' bathing platform on the gently sloping Margate Sands.
Until the 1960s, Winchester's pupils led a Spartan existence, bathing every day in cold water in tin baths; perhaps this helped generations of schoolboys to face the rigours of life outside and
Swanage has an advantage as a resort in that there is little difference between high and low tides, allowing good bathing at most times of the day.
Now part of the City of Bath, this once provided access to the Bath stone quarries of the 18th-century magnate Ralph Allen.
Wroxeter, known in Roman times as Viroconium Cornovior, became a tribal capital and the fourth largest Roman town in Britain.
By the 1920s, bathing costumes had become more practical than those shown in the previous illustrations, and the bathing machines had become redundant in favour of smaller kiosks and tents.
Safe bathing brought thousands of early visitors to Shanklin, as we can see from the profusion of bathing huts and tents.
The early use of bathing machines made Weymouth a popular resort for sea bathing, and the town has never looked back.
As Clifton's reputation as a resort grew, the late Georgian terraces were built in a style that deliberately imitated Bath.
Bath is, architecturally speaking, one of England's greatest cities.
Wroxeter, known in Roman times as Viroconium Cornovior, became a tribal capital and the fourth largest Roman town in Britain.
Much grander is Bath Street.
The bathing arrangements here are peculiar.
In 1897 the architect John Brydon added these dignified colonnades around the baths with their balustrades and statues.
Rows of bathing huts line the beach, with bathing costumes (which could be hired) drying in the wind on lines behind them beside the newly-built promenade.
Ventnor never compared to Sandown or Shanklin as a centre for sea bathing, though bathing machines for ladies and gentlemen flourished in King Edward VII's reign.
The open air baths were well populated in summer.
The extended garden of the house is now a forecourt for a modern hotel built on the site of the old rock garden, which used to be the kitchen garden with glasshouses.
Bathing machines were designed to be pushed into the sea, allowing bathers to change and enter the water with maximum decorum.
On the west side of the city, towards Fountains Abbey, stands the Spa Baths and Pump Room, opened on 24 October 1905 by Prince Henry of Battenburg.
During the 19th century the borough council were desperately seeking new fresh water supplies for the town.
An elderly visitor contemplates a busy Sidmouth sea front on a summer's day in the 1950s.
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