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Photos
134 photos found. Showing results 121 to 134.
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Books
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Memories
540 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.
Bombing Raids In 1940
Bristol's premier shopping centre was turned into a wasteland of burned out buildings after major bombing raids in 1940, during the Second World War. Bridge Street Summary Bridge Street ran from High Street, rising up a ...Read more
A memory of Bristol by
Born & Bred
THE FAMILY HOME. I was born in the front room of the last bay windowed house on Station Road in 1964, number 87. I have fond memories of growing up & playing on the street, thankfully the house is still in the family. Although the village has changed over the years Station Road hasn’t!
A memory of Eckington by
Born At Cothill Farm And Schooled In Duns
I was born at Cothill Farm in 1947, about 4 miles from Duns. I attended Duns Primary School and Berwickshire High School. My father (James) retired in 1965 at age 70, he and my mother located to the west ...Read more
A memory of Duns in 1965 by
Borwick Lane And Warton Crag
I lived in Warton - on Borwick Lane for the first 18 years of my life. In 1963, I was ten years old and Warton was a lovely little village. Borwick Lane was very much a quiet back road - not the ...Read more
A memory of Warton in 1963 by
Boy From The Slums
I was born on the 28th March 1947, into an existing family of 5 siblings in a one-up one-down decaying terraced house of 12 Russell Street, Teams, Gateshead, just off Upton Street, near to the coke works, the gas works, the ...Read more
A memory of Gateshead in 1947 by
Bradford House
My daughters and I lived happily at Bradford House for seven years in the late 1990's ... The house was originally two 17th century cottages at right angles to each other. The Victorians then re-modelled one of the ...Read more
A memory of Bradford-on-Tone by
Brambles Holiday Camp
When I was about ten (1967), we went on holiday from London to the Isle of Wight with my mum and dad and brother. We stayed at Brambles Holiday Camp, which I think was in Freshwater Bay? It was one of those old ...Read more
A memory of Freshwater Bay by
Brambletye Preparatory School
Memories of Brambletye Boys Preparatory School 1967 – 1971. When I went to Brambletye at the age of nine, in September 1967, it was my fifth school in the last four years. As my parents were routinely ...Read more
A memory of Brambletye House in 1967
Brambletye School One Easter
It was wonderful to read ‘Memories of Brambletye Boys Preparatory School 1967 – 1971’ including a mention of the catering staff: "The food was always prepared and brought to the ends of the tables in large ...Read more
A memory of Brambletye House in 1964 by
Bramcote Children's Hospital
I was placed in Bramcote 1983 at the age of 9 for a year. I liked it a bit but only as I was getting physically abused by my step mum at home daily,it was a break from the beatings for a week,we would all go ...Read more
A memory of Bramcote by
Captions
870 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.
Instead of horses and carts, cars now clog the pavement outside the Black Bull. Note how the dark ashlar is picked out by severe white mortaring.
By the turn of the century the village was growing very quickly, although it was still far from urban sprawl.
Punch and Judy hold the attention of the formally-dressed crowd of holidaymakers in the South Bay.
The High Street continues north, downhill towards the parish church, while the through road was widened and improved in 1950s.
A view looking eastwards along the rocky Barnaderg Bay towards Letterfrack and Diamond Hill. Letterfrack, situated in the heart of the National Park, is one of the major centres of Connemara.
Looking through the gate the Crown Hotel, now no longer in existence, can be seen on the left of the High Street.
This general view shows typical houses of the time; the terrace in the foreground is followed by 1950s semis leading down to the waters of the inlet of Carmarthen Bay, with the Gower peninsular just visible
Small, well-mannered cottages set a later 19th-century scene in the days before parked cars lined the roads.
Beyond Torquay harbour is the fine sweep of Torbay. In Nelson's day the entire British fleet could anchor within the sheltering arms of the bay.
South of the market-place, the old grammar school is centred around a wide, seven-bay red-brick building of 1765.
As is customary in medieval great churches, the choir stalls occupy the first bays of the nave.
South of the market-place, the old grammar school is centred around a wide, seven-bay red-brick building of 1765.
Partially hidden behind C&A is the Georgian edifice of Holy Trinity church, completed in 1727. It was designed by Halfpenny, with a later 1839 tower and square spire by Chantrell.
A pleasing picture of the little pier at Schull. All is quiet, with rowing boats and a yacht moored in the small bay. Note the car at the entrance to the quayside.
The village still sees some crab and lobster fishing, and Beadnell Bay is excellent for sailing.
There is a chapel dedicated to St Patrick in the Bay marked by a plaque; he is said to have set out for Ireland from here.
Its clifftops offer extensive views across the shining waters of Poole Bay.
A horse-tram from Port Bannatyne makes its way along Rothesay Esplanade. The tramway extended to Ettrick Bay on the west coast and was electrified in 1902.
This view shows the end of Boutport Street, where it enters The Square. The large building in the dis- tance is The Athenaeum.
By the time this photograph was taken building to the left of the picture had been painted and deprived of its bay window. The street is now tarmacadam.
Delightful dark brown granite cottages hug the narrow choked streets of Mousehole (pronounced Mouzel).
The twin villages of Cawsand and Kingsand nestle into the hills on the west of Cawsand Bay; they were once, like so many Cornish villages, a centre for smugglers.
High tide in the Basin, looking eastwards to St John's Church (left of centre), West Bay Hotel (centre), the Custom House (right of centre) and Old Storehouse (further right).
There is a spring in the step of the young soldiers who have just been dropped off at the bus station.
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