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Photos
4 photos found. Showing results 101 to 4.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 121 to 1.
Memories
95 memories found. Showing results 51 to 60.
Over Here
Over Here... The first American troops to arrive in our part of the world arrived in 1942. The came to what became know as Sudbury Camp (nearly in Marchington). A hospital was built at the present site of HMP Prison. A great ...Read more
A memory of Stramshall by
Power Boats
The wooden clinker built boat, painted white in the lower right of the picture, was one of a pair of fast boats that the late Arthur Shippey and Tom Louis ran from coffee house end steps. They would call loudly ""half hour trips round ...Read more
A memory of Whitby in 1953 by
Raoc Army Camp
I was stationed at 104 Veh Coy (AFV) RAOC in the early fifties as an eighteen year old conscripted soldier. I have tried all ways to find any details of the camp and had no luck at all. I would appreciate it if anyone can recall ...Read more
A memory of Royston in 1951 by
Royal National Hospital Ventnor
I worked as a nurse at the hospital from 1955 to 1956 and went back for the first time in June of this year. It was really nostalgic to be there again, even though the hospital has long gone the Botanic Gardens are ...Read more
A memory of Ventnor in 1956 by
Royston Army Camp.
Was posted to camp in 1954 and demobbed in 1957.Was called up for National service but the CO persuaded you to sign on as a regular and you got 28 days leave.Probably nowadays they would be Court Marshalled for suggesting ...Read more
A memory of Royston by
Seaham Harbour
THE MEN WOULD BRING THE BOATS IN AND HANG BUNCHES OF CRABS AND FISH ON THE RAIL SO WE COULD CHOOSE OUR OWN.
A memory of Seaham by
Seafront Bungalow
I remember staying here with my parents sister and cousin must have been about 1950. I would have been about 6 or 7. Seem to remember a sort of sunroom located at the front where us kids slept in makeshift beds made up from ...Read more
A memory of Southwold
Seaham Harbour
All my family come from Murton, some are still there. I remember as a child going to the harbour and getting fresh crabs - they were big ones, and once one grabbed my granda`s coat and we had to free him as the claws were big too. ...Read more
A memory of Seaham by
Seaton Sluice Harbour Houseboat
I was born in Newsham in 1949 and lived in The Oval till I joined the RAF In 1967. My father Edward used to take me to Seaton Sluice to visit family when a youngster aged about 6 yrs old. He pointed out to me ...Read more
A memory of Seaton Sluice by
Seven Years Of My Childhood
I was at St Michael's from 1943 to 1950. The school had just moved from Uxbridge because of the war. Old gilded pictures, suits of armour stored. We weren't suppose to go there. Great friends with Barry and Copp. We ...Read more
A memory of Tawstock in 1943 by
Captions
211 captions found. Showing results 121 to 144.
The River Piddle winds beneath the chalk downlands of Dorset, giving its name to several villages along the way before reaching the sea at Poole Harbour.
The town of Poole grew up around the older quays of the great harbour; during these times it was purely functional, catering for mercantile activities, shipping and pottery manufactured from the
Centuries ago, an arm of the sea came up to Wareham from what is now Poole Harbour.
The nearness of Barry Station and the view from the balconies over the Old Harbour were the main selling points for prospective purchasers.
Small inshore fishing boats are drawn up at the back of the harbour, where two jetties were built in the 1890s to provide shelter and encourage this local industry.
The older anchorages of Sutton Harbour and Stonehouse, with the greater expanse of the Hamoaze and Plymouth Sound beyond, created a perfect naval base long before the new town of Devonport was founded.
Here we see the southern end of the sands on a very crowded day in the 1950s, with the cranes of the harbour and Nothe Fort in the distance.
It is difficult to believe that less than twenty years later, the harbour was the scene of nationalist gun-running.
Boats can still operate in and out of this harbour when weather conditions close those that face the prevailing south-westerlies.
Fowey, the 'Troy Town' popularised by the Victorian writer Quiller Couch, is blessed with a spacious natural harbour, and was once one of the foremost seaports of Britain.
This is the inner pool of the Cobb Harbour; we are looking north-westwards to High Cliff, prominent on the wooded hilltop (left).
number of maritime business premises to Military Road, which has been widened considerably; and this post-war photograph also shows a number of ex- Naval converted motor boats moored in the harbour
The large building on the right is the Harbour of Refuge - a splendid name for a seaside public house!
The estuary provides a sheltered natural harbour, and in the past schooners such as the one here were a common sight.
Its natural harbour, sheltered by the limestone cliffs, made it ideal for settlement.
Iron Age dwellers built a fortification on Berry Head, and Celtic inhabitants would have collected salt and fish where the harbour now stands.
St John's Church, situated dramatically above Torquay harbour, was built in limestone excavated from its own site by G E Street in 1861.
After the harbour had become unusable, a number of warehouses and granaries were redeveloped.
This unusual view shows the Mount's estate houses and a harbour wall, with Marazion stretched out along the coast and Trencrom Hill rising behind on the extreme left.
Swords and armour bedeck the walls.
This view of the Upper Harbour in the ancient port of Whitby situated where the River Esk runs into the North Sea has hardly changed since the 1950s.
Low tide in the harbour, which was another of the creations of Colonel Senhouse in the mid 18th century.
Its capacious natural harbour, protected from the sea by the long spit of sand, Blakeney Point, attracted coastal trading vessels until the early years of this century.
Pentewan village is on the far side of the beach, and two sailing boats set off from the harbour pier.
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Memories (95)
Books (1)
Maps (71)