Maps

471 maps found.

1923, Peak Forest Ref. POP802229
1919, Liss Forest Ref. POP756742
1947, Aydon Forest Ref. NPO629326
1946, Bulwell Forest Ref. NPO655346
1947, Forest Head Ref. NPO707893
1946, Forest Hill Ref. NPO707901
1898, Savernake Forest Ref. RNE825738
1897, Forest Hall Ref. RNE707887
1895, Forest Hill Ref. RNE707901
1896, Macclesfield Forest Ref. RNE771315
1907, Macclesfield Forest Ref. HOSM52917
1884, Forest Town Ref. HOSM45649
1898, Forest Hill Ref. HOSM45742
1902, Far Forest Ref. HOSM45126
1899, Melksham Forest Ref. HOSM45631
1895, Forest Hall Ref. HOSM37517
1897, Ashdown Forest Ref. HOSM69989
1886, Wareham Forest Ref. HOSM55316
1882, Forest Green Ref. HOSM44008
1882, Forest Green Ref. HOSM45641

Books

2 books found. Showing results 97 to 2.

Memories

432 memories found. Showing results 41 to 50.

Corringham Essex

My father worked on a construction site at Tilbury I think it was, so our family moved from Thornaby to Corringham.  We lived in a trailer on a farm just behind the Bull Inn, right next to a school.  There was a lane between ...Read more

A memory of Stanford-le-Hope in 1951 by Max Anderson

Button Oak

I lived in Button Oak during 1942/43 and worked in the Wyre Forest for 'Bob' Harris who was the Forester. Along with two of my mates, Denis Mills and Hubert Till, I made frequent trips into Bewdley to go to the pictures or get my hair cut. ...Read more

A memory of Bewdley in 1940 by Robert Aldridge

Cotgrave Memories

Our grandad George Boultby was a miner at Cotgrave. Because we didn't have a car, we had to go on the old type Barton buses. We would walk from the bus stop to our grandparents' house. They used to live in two different locations, ...Read more

A memory of Cotgrave in 1970 by Jean Smith

Cookridge Once Fields And Farms

I moved from Holbeck in 1948 into one of the first estates to be built in North West Leeds, Ireland Wood (Raynels). In 1950 I went to Cookridge School, then a wooden hut right slap bang opposite where Cookridge fire ...Read more

A memory of Cookridge in 1950 by Paul Leavett

Sundays

Sundays were memorable, after a proper Sunday roast we would walk from our house at Chingford Hatch, up to the Royal Forest Hotel, then through the woods to the Owl pub, we would sit in the gardens with a drink and a bag of crisps, they had ...Read more

A memory of Chingford in 1956 by Christine Jeffrey

The Berth

Hi, I was born in 10 Horner Street, in 1941, parents were Idris and Olive, one sister Pat, lived in England for a while. Came back to Wales in 1953, worked in Hestons rubber factory for about a year then the nylon spinners at Pontypool ...Read more

A memory of Tir-y-berth in 1941 by Alan Davies

The Volunteer Arms

My Great Grandfather Alfred Saunders (1863-1944) looked after the Volunteer Arms before he semi-retired, he also had an interest in the Forest King Pub and the Percy Arms at Chilworth (plus he had shares in Hodgsons ...Read more

A memory of Blackheath in 1900 by Pamela Patten

Lt Spencer Baker Died At Passchendaele 1917

Spencer Baker was my grandfather's cousin. He grew up at Forest Farm, Chelwood Gate, son of Spencer snr and Susan Baker (née Lindfield). Spencer was a building contractor and at the age of 29, in ...Read more

A memory of Chelwood Gate by William Lovell

Happy Childhood Memories

My life in Edwinstowe started in 1953. My father was starting a new job of caretaker at King Edwin School, l was three years old. My new friend was Jean Matkin whose father also worked at the school, we had many happy ...Read more

A memory of Edwinstowe in 1953 by Linda Brown

Grange Wood

Many happy years playing in Grange Wood and surrounding fields and walking through the fields up to Acton Bridge. Picnics with jam butties and water. Bike rides up to Cuddington and Hartford. Long summer holidays when the tar melted on ...Read more

A memory of Weaverham in 1967

Captions

372 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.

Caption For Linwood, The Village C1965

Linwood is situated high on the heathlands of the western edge of the New Forest, overlooking the broad valley of the Avon.

Caption For Basildon, Town Square C1965

At the time of our photo, its three echelons included ABC Wallpapers, Forbuoys newsagents and Robinson Rentals at the bottom; Peter's gents' hairdressing and Hart's store in the middle; and offices for estate

Caption For Crowborough, High Street 1900

The town - the highest in Sussex - stands at the eastern edge of Ashdown Forest. By the early 1900s it was billed as 'Sussex's answer to Scotland'!

Caption For Crockham Hill, C1955

This lovely village is said to command one of the finest views in Kent across the Weald towards Ashdown Forest. It sits alongside the Surrey boundary, two miles north of Edenbridge.

Caption For Burley, The Village C1950

This material was used for the foundations of a number of New Forest churches.

Caption For New Forest, The Old Roman Bridge 1908

The Romans took a great interest in the New Forest. It supplied wood and charcoal to fire kilns for the manufacture of pottery or for the smelting of iron.

Caption For Ramsgate, The Inner Harbour C1955

During the mid 20th century the forest of masts had vanished from Ramsgate's harbour, giving it a very different appearance to earlier pictures.

Caption For High Halden, The Church C1955

Once surrounded by forested land, this church boasts remarkable timbered west and south porches built in the early 14th century, and comprising some fifty tons of oak wood.

Caption For Binfield, The Stag And Hounds 1892

The Stag Inn dates back to the 18th century, and the elm tree on the right reputedly marked the centre of Windsor Forest.

Caption For Bracknell, High Street 1901

The Stag Inn dates back to the 18th century, and the elm tree on the right reputedly marked the centre of Windsor Forest.

Caption For Ingatestone, High Street 1925

Chigwell, situated on the edge of Hainault forest, has been much developed over the years, but the village still presents a deceptively leafy appearance.The bakery and tea-rooms are reminders that

Caption For Woodhouse Eaves, Main Street C1955

Set in the heart of Charnwood Forest, this pretty village was a favourite destination for Edwardian trippers, and features on many postcards.

Caption For Christchurch, The Priory Church 1890

Christchurch is one of the oldest settlements around the New Forest. It was probably in existence even before the Romans settled in the shelter of Hengistbury Head after 43 AD.

Caption For Fordingbridge, The Bridge C1950

To the north-west of the New Forest is the peaceful little town of Fordingbridge, named after the ancient ford and medieval bridge which facilitate a passage across the River Avon at this point.

Caption For Ganllwyd, Tyn Y Groes Hotel C1955

This 19th-century inn has always catered for the anglers who frequent the fast-running waters of the Rover Mawddach in the Coed y Brenin forest near Dolgellay to catch their salmon and trout.

Caption For Hatfield Broad Oak, St Mary's Church C1965

In the north-west corner of the parish lies the ancient Hatfield Forest.

Caption For Cadnam, Twin Oaks 1932

Cadnam, or Cadenham, stands at an important road junction at the north-western corner of the New Forest; sooner or later every traveller in the locality is bound to pass through the village.

Caption For Worcester, The Cathedral, The Crypt 1893

Built partly of reused masonry from St Oswald's Benedictine Priory, it is very beautiful, with a forest of stone columns supporting a simple vaulted roof.

Caption For Congleton, Dane Valley Bridge 1898

The Macclesfield Canal was not completed until 1831, but provided a link between the Peak Forest and the Trent & Mersey canals.

Caption For Astbury, The Village And Church 1902

The ivy-clad cottages facing the village green were built in the 19th century for agricultural workers, and are an example of the general improvement in housing for estate workers.

Caption For Bracknell, The Market Inn 1951

Bracknell grew up from the inns on the road between Ascot Heath and Reading, once a popular haunt of highwaymen who lay in waiting for their quarry among the trees of the old Windsor Forest

Caption For Ringwood, The Kettle Tea House, Picket Post C1955

Picket Post is a tiny hamlet on the high road between Ringwood and the New Forest. It is a convenient place to stop for tea, sit on a bench and watch the world go by.

Caption For Botley, The Square C1955

Elcock's, the little newsagent and tobacconist almost hidden behind a forest of newspaper signs and placards, has been replaced by a beauty therapist, and most of the shops either side of the Bugle Inn

Caption For Milford On Sea, High Street C1960

Milford on Sea's church, along with the one at Brockenhurst, was a survivor of the forest clearances and receives a mention in the Domesday Book.