Maps

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Memories

2,827 memories found. Showing results 581 to 590.

1960’s

I remember Stanford Dingley when the cottages existed opposite Dumbledore on Jennets hill, they used the water pump opposite. A fire destroyed the semi-detached house opposite where Casey Court now stands. There was a post office ...Read more

A memory of Stanford Dingley

Good Times

I lived in Belsize Road, Swiss Cottage end for many years from the 50s through the 60s till i got married, I remember lots of things, the buses getting stuck in the road going up to Swiss Cottage in the snow and ice and having to be ...Read more

A memory of Swiss Cottage by Patricia Venton

Brightlands

My grandfather worked as a chauffeur and then a gardener for a family called Edwards who lived at this house in the 1930s and 1940s. My grandfather had a cottage in the grounds. When we visited and the Edwards were not at home, we were allowed to play on the lawn at the back of the house.

A memory of Reigate by Sandy Norman

Molly Gray's Memories Of Weston Green, Thames Ditton, Surrey.

When we were children during WWII, my brothers Rob and Wilf and myself often visited Weston Green. At Weston Green there were two churches and two ponds called Marneys and Milburns. My ...Read more

A memory of Weston Green by Janet Moore

The Cottages

As a little girl (1960s)our family would travel to Kincardin, Lake Huron every summer. My Aunt and Uncle Ken Brown owned a cottage there. I was so sad to hear of the nuclear plant that went in and plowed away the cottages. So many ...Read more

A memory of Kincardine by Pam Macintyre

Old Friends

I lived in Smallfield during the war years, firstly in Broadbridge Cottages surrounded by barrage balloons and then New Road. My best friend was Sandra Steel, remember all the children in the road had chickenpox at the same time. We ...Read more

A memory of Smallfield by Marion Bannister

Precious Memories!

Some of my most precious memories of life belong to Menith Wood. My parents bought a caravan where we had many happy times on the “Bird in Hand” public house caravan site, opposite the woods. I remember feeding “Thomas” the boar, ...Read more

A memory of Menithwood by Elizabeth Flint

Mining My Archive

At the age of ten, my father moved me and the rest of the family from Low Fell to Esh Winning, without consulting any of us, including my mother. He had bought a tumble-down holiday cottage, situated between the pit-heap and the ...Read more

A memory of Esh Winning by David Woodhead

My Fenny Stratford Childhood

Having recently by chance spoken with someone who knew Fenny Stratford I was prompted to start looking on the internet and came across this site and for what it’s worth decided to record my memories. I was born ...Read more

A memory of Fenny Stratford by Dawn Cousins

Young Parkinson Family Of Crook, Howden Le Wear, And Barnard Castle Co. Durham

My Mum, Edna Young, was born at 6, Cemetery Cottages, Crook, on the 26th of December, 1922. Dad was Walter Lawrence Young, who was born: (35) Bridge Street, in Howden le Wear, and Mum, was ...Read more

A memory of Crook by Pauline Barker

Captions

2,020 captions found. Showing results 1,393 to 1,416.

Caption For Wadhurst, High Street 1903

All we can see in this photograph are cottages and the village shop. It had a weekly market from 1253 until it was closed in 1982. The last bare-fisted boxing match was held in Wadhurst in 1863.

Caption For Burton Bradstock, 1909

Cottages sit beside Skilling Hill Road in a panorama eastwards across the double vales of the River Simene and the River Brit.

Caption For Upwey, St Lawrence's Church And Village C1870

Positioned cosily under the downs, and with its cluster of thatched and slate-roofed cottages around it, the Perpendicular tower of St Lawrence's Church rises above the surrounding gravestones.

Caption For Plaxtol, Village 1901

The village has a wealth of old houses, including a row of Kentish weatherboard cottages flanking the side of the parish church.

Caption For Great Haywood, Trent Lane C1955

A Morris Minor with L-plates stands outside the cottages. They were built in 1806 to re-house workers from the Shugborough estate and thereby ensure privacy for the Hall's residents.

Caption For West Clandon, Post Office 1928

Brownlow Cottage (left), surrounded by its white picket fence, housed the village store and post office, its windows graced with enamel lettering signs advertising Fry's chocolate and cocoa.

Caption For Welton, High Street C1955

The cottages on the left have been partially replaced by new large houses.

Caption For East Runton, High Street 1921

With only a few of the original cottages remaining on the right-hand side of this picture, we can see that this village is undergoing a population explosion, with many families moving from

Caption For Oakham, Hawthorn Horse C1955

The Old Barn is opposite the row of terraced cottages. To the left is Kilburn Yard.

Caption For Botley, Church Lane C1955

Take a stroll down Church Lane and you can see that the scene on the right of this photograph has not changed at all.The little cottage on the left has been replaced by a redbrick house, and there

Caption For Stanhill, Peel's Fold C1955

The great residences which the Peels built in Hyndburn have been swept away, but this Tudor cottage, now lovingly restored, remains as a monument to one of Lancashire's great families.

Caption For Skelton, Church Lane C1965

These old stone cottages lie on the approach to Skelton Castle, and the wide gateway to the left beyond them is the start of the driveway up to the castle.

Caption For Ilkley, Royal Hotel 1914

It was built on the site of Mother Downes' charming thatched cottage in 1870 and was much enlarged ­twenty years later.

Caption For Ventnor, The Esplanade 1908

Now we have hotels, churches, shops, cottages and villas in every conceivable style and every outrageous shape.

Caption For Marlborough, London Road C1950

The double-gabled Five Alls is beyond the car, and in the distance is a group of 18th-century cottages.

Caption For Luton, Park Road 1897

The thatched cottage, known as 'Why axe ye', was a favourite subject for early photography.

Caption For Swithland, C1955

The Tudoresque cottages of c1840, with their drip moulds and lattice windows, make an attractive composi- tion which has changed little.

Caption For Brockham, Old School Lane 1958

Further down Tanner's Hill, the lane becomes Old School Lane; this view looks north past these pairs of tile-hung former estate cottages, which are all now in private hands and extended by a bay at

Caption For Long Wittenham, The Village C1960

minor lane was taken by Frith's photographer as one of the company's normal village store or post office views; in the middle distance is the gable of a thatched cruck house, the self-explanatory Cruck Cottage

Caption For Swanage, John Wesley's Cottage 1892

Wesley's Cottage, on the north side of the High Street to the west of the Town Hall, where the founding preacher of Methodism stayed on the night of 12-13 October 1774.

Caption For Brent Eleigh, C1960

The post office, now Swan Cottage, displayed advertisements for Walls ice cream and Bird's Eye frozen foods.

Caption For Hadleigh, High Street C1960

In the intervening five years since H167010 was taken, the Esso Garage has obviously expanded, although the cottages and shops on the right are little changed.

Caption For Horsforth, Town Street 1901

Also on Town Street was the Salvation Army, tithe cottages for the local clergy, and, grouped around the old Arcade, the post office, bank, bakers, florists and cobblers.

Caption For Ampthill, Woburn Street C1955

Woburn Street enters Market Place from the west and has more vernacular houses and cottages along each side.