Places
1 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
12 photos found. Showing results 101 to 12.
Maps
703 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 121 to 2.
Memories
182 memories found. Showing results 51 to 60.
Rydal Avenue Winton Eccles
Hi, my name is Roy Mozley & I was born in 1948 in a prefab in Rydal Avenue, Winton. We then moved to Lambton St, Winton. This was our football pitch then, main problem was this guy who, lets say, used to visit a ...Read more
A memory of Eccles in 1950 by
Childhood To Marriage
MY first memory of"LLan"was driving down the hill from Swffryyd, to my new home at No.6 High Street. My father Thomas Hughes, with my mother Eileen, had purchased Barttlets Grocery Store,a long held wish of my fathers to ...Read more
A memory of Llanhilleth by
My Memoirs 1964 1966 Part One
Wayne Carter My father is Frederick Carter born in London, and mother was Loraine Carter nee Chadwick was born Cyfarthfa Street Roath; mum sadly passed away in 1998. I have a younger sister Jane Carter nee ...Read more
A memory of St Mellons in 1964 by
Growing Up In The 70s
I was born and brought up in Thingwall Drive, right on the boundary of Irby and opposite the entrance to the golf course. I went to Irby CP School, Coombe Road, and then onto Calday Grange Grammar School. My Granny lived just ...Read more
A memory of Irby in 1976 by
Croydon Surrey Street A E Pearce
I have very fond memories of Croydon, especially Reeves Corner which has now been destroyed. I was born on Fairholme Road in 1974, but moved to Wallington when I was three. But we shopped in Croydon most Saturdays, ...Read more
A memory of Croydon in 1980 by
11 Years Of Age And Gazing
I never swam here but I remember going there with my family and walking around the Abbey Fields and coming across the Swimming Pool. It was a hot summers day and we spent the afternoon sunbathing and me well...sunbathing and gazing of which I loved to do.
A memory of Kenilworth in 1965 by
My Granmother
Last thoughts, for her, was my father's mother, did see her, I remember in a place called CULTURE HOUSE, next to old police station, just as you come over railway bridge, on left hand side, on the way to JARROW. I think she ran a bed ...Read more
A memory of Hebburn by
Noneley 2010
My name is Stephen Geary and my partner, Jodie Flynn, an Australian, and I live at Noneley Hall with our 4 four children, Charles (16), Abigail (14), Teddy (22m) and Madeleine (4m). The house was the farmhouse for Noneley Hall Farm, ...Read more
A memory of Noneley in 2010 by
High Street Monkeys
Can anyone tell me the name of the Public House that was situated in High Street Burton, opposite side of the road to The Burton Mail Offices (before the Bargates was built), around mid to late 1950's? There was an ...Read more
A memory of Burton upon Trent by
B B And Evening Meal In A Constantine Home
I believe I was about 12 years old when I stayed with my parents in a bed and breakfast house in Constantine that also did an evening meal. They were a beautiful Cornish couple and had a water pump ...Read more
A memory of Constantine in 1956 by
Captions
157 captions found. Showing results 121 to 144.
Note the Three Tuns public house with its Joules Stone Ales signs.
it is currently a public house serving real ales and an imaginative menu.
It was the 'clean and commodious ale-house' where the love-lorn Mr Tracy Tupman stayed in Charles Dickens' 'Pickwick Papers'.
This old shepherd, plodding on to Walsingham market, has been enjoying a glass of ale in the 'White Hart'.
Albert Bowen, licensee of the Hunt, Edmunds & Co pub is not yet serving Banbury ales, wines and spirits. But for the young girl with the satchel on her back, the start of another school day beckons.
It was the 'clean and commodious ale-house' where the love-lorn Mr Tracy Tupman stayed in Charles Dickens' 'Pickwick Papers'.
church of St Mary was rebuilt in 1849, with a timber bell turret and a shingled spire.THis photograph shows the old coaching inn on the Emsworth to Harting road, which sold Henty and Constable's ales
As was the fashion, everyone has a head covering with the exception of the youngsters outside the shop selling Allsopp's ale in the right foreground.
Note the characteristic Watney's sloping lettering and the barrel over the inn sign - the symbol of the then voguish keg bitter that so nearly was to destroy real ale, in my opinion, in the 1960s.
Above The Forester's Arms' door is a sign for Cheltenham Ales, which is a brand name with a long lineage.
As the Alice Holt Forest receded, this area was planted with hop-bines; Wrecclesham helped to supply the breweries and ale-houses of Farnham with their raw materials, while its inhabitants maintained a
This old shepherd, plodding on to Walsingham market, has been enjoying a glass of ale in the 'White Hart'. His sheep have just been sheared, and are watched over by his dog in the foreground.
Note the wonderfully-lettered sign for the Duke Bar Bottle Stores on the left of the picture, which promotes 'Grimshaw's Lancastrian Ales & Stout'.
The fact that there are so many streams and burns feeding into the river system makes the area even more fascinating.
Note the Three Tuns public house with its Joules Stone Ales signs.
Prominent on the south side of the village in 1955, Ruddles Brewery, founded in 1858, was producing fine real ales, but in 1986 it was sold to Watneys, eventually to be absorbed into the Grand Metropolitan
The complete sign on the left, Tetley's Fine Ales, was fixed to the old Bowling Green Hotel; it marked the narrowest point on the London to Edinburgh Great North Road.
Students formerly referred to Old Elvet as Three Taverns because of its trinity of locations to sup their ale.
Prominent on the south side of the village in 1955, Ruddles Brewery, founded in 1858, was producing fine real ales, but in 1986 it was sold to Watneys, eventually to be absorbed into the Grand Metropolitan
The pure spring water of Pendle is still favoured for home-brewed ales.
We are in the Cuckmere Valley, with fine views of the scarp side of the Downs.
Note the wonderfully-lettered sign for the Duke Bar Bottle Stores on the left of the picture, which promotes 'Grimshaw's Lancastrian Ales & Stout'.
We can just make out the advertisement for Whittle Spring Noted Ales to the right of the main door.
'Give me a price of a mug of ale', the mason is said to have told him, 'and I'll put your mug on the tower!'
Places (1)
Photos (12)
Memories (182)
Books (2)
Maps (703)