Places
9 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,739 photos found. Showing results 1,101 to 1,120.
Maps
776 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 1,321 to 1.
Memories
2,732 memories found. Showing results 551 to 560.
Happy Times
I went to live in Llanthony village around 1970 with my husband who was brought up at The Daren Farm, and our children Lynda and Andrew. We lived in The Cornmill which is directly opposite the old post office, it was called Mill Cottage ...Read more
A memory of Llanthony
Childhood Memories.
I grew up in the house at the end of the street which was called Cherry Cottage.I would be about 3 or 4 when the picture was taken. My mum had the large Yew tree on the right of the house front sawn down as it made the house dark. My ...Read more
A memory of Naburn by
Dunmurry In The 60s & 70s
I lived in dunmurry for 16 years from 1960 until 1976 the things that i remember in the village were the two barber shops the first one was beside jack norths sweet shop on the bridge where as a young boy i remember being left ...Read more
A memory of Dunmurry by
Post Office Sports Field
When I was a child in the 1940s, this sports field belonged to the Post Office. Occasionally there would be a horse in residence and this is where I had my first and only ride on such an animal. The stadium on the left ...Read more
A memory of Beddington by
Charnwood Forest Children's Convalescent Home, Summer 1950
It was July/August of 1950 when I was sent here from my home town of Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent at the age of eight, to convalesce after a serious post-operative infection. My first ...Read more
A memory of Woodhouse Eaves by
Wokingham Shops
Anyone remember the petrol station ,next to saint Crispins school called Bourne and Thomas,a real traditional garage ,the thames trader tipper trucks moving the soil from the A329m ,green in colour ,think the company name was harry ...Read more
A memory of Wokingham by
Priestwood Square 1960s And 70s
I can remember the square not only for its shops but also as a meeting place . Most of our games back then involved huge amounts of our friends either playing war games or football matches over on the field opposite ...Read more
A memory of Bracknell by
Wexham Rd Post Office
Hi Kevin, I think a Mr P.R.Poter ran the Upton Lea post office he wasthere in 1950s
A memory of Slough by
Cyril Henry Heath And The Heath Family.
I have been told of old troedy many times and been driven through it to Bargoed, not much there now just a post office. My step father Cyril Heath was born there in September 1934, quite a large family so ...Read more
A memory of Troedrhiwfuwch by
Coppice Avenue Lower Willingdon
I lived above Walters the greengrocers next to the post office from 1948 to 1959 and remember what an amazing time it was .Holters was just around the corner where we used to buy his 1p lollies next door was ...Read more
A memory of Lower Willingdon by
Captions
1,653 captions found. Showing results 1,321 to 1,344.
It helps to explain that, except for the post war development, Mobberley is a village of many pubs, as each little settlement knot has at least one place of refreshment.
A similar trend is reflected in the pictures of villages, taken because there were once village shops and post offices which were points of sale.
This was the first street in the town to be built, but it had long lost its residents when this view was taken.
Fortunately these plans came to nothing and the gallery began to be used as a hostel where off-duty service women, posted to this area, could spend their leisure time.
She trained her daughters, Mary and Lucy, in new skills as telegraphists, and when Mary took over in 1891 she lobbied for a custom- built post office in the town.
However, by 1847 James Thorn could write in 'Rambles by Rivers' that 'there are several large inns, to which was formerly a considerable posting trade attached, but it was almost destroyed by the
The Romans found it, and used it for a signal post; the remains of this are still visible within the walls of the Castle. Later, the Norsemen came calling (and pil- laging).
It cost one penny to travel the length of New Street by horse-drawn omnibus, while a Hansom cab cost somewhat more.
It cost one penny to travel the length of New Street by horse-drawn omnibus, while a Hansom cab cost somewhat more.
It was opened in 1892, when a ticket up or down cost 1d (one old penny). Today only return tickets are available, and these now cost 70 pence.
In 1967, 'Trencherman', writing for 'Hertfordshire 'Countryside magazine, reported that the bill for a three-course meal for two cost £3 2s 8d (£3.18), and that the main course of two(!)
It cost 4s 6d a night to stay here, with dinner costing between 4-5s. The Red Horse and the Golden Lion were slightly cheaper.
In 1914 a pound of butter at the Meadow Dairy Co would have cost 1s 3d; by 1920 the war had pushed the price up to 2s 11d.
On the right are the Royal Baths, which cost nearly £100,000 to build; even the Kursaal, which opened in 1903, cost over £70,000.
On the right are the Royal Baths, which cost nearly £100,000 to build; Harrogate was never parsimonious in its development plans - the Kursaal, which opened in 1903, cost over £70,000.
The City Hall is being re-furbished at a cost of over £12-million, the money coming mainly from the European Union and central government; Weston Park Museum and the Mappin Art Gallery are undergoing
In the 1770s the cost of bringing even a small vessel up the river from Pill could cost in the region of £10.
Between 1914 and 1920 there had been huge increases in the prices of even the most basic of foodstuffs.
Brunel estimated that the bridge would cost £52,966 to construct.
Completed in 1753 at a cost of £12, the Market Hall, Butter Cross and the stocks were removed at a cost of £16 6s from Main Street to the Prince of Wales park in 1888, which is where we see them in this
Madeira Walk cost nearly £60,000 to build, and because of the cost, the waterfall was dubbed 'the rate-payers' tears'.
The whole castle cost £85,923 13s 11d, or nearly £9 million in today's money.
The whole castle cost £85,923 13s 11d, or nearly £9 million in today's money.
Built in the Scottish Baronial style, at a cost of £400,000, the infirmary was dealing with 8,000 patients a year by 1900.
Places (9)
Photos (2739)
Memories (2732)
Books (1)
Maps (776)