Maps

7,210 maps found.

1919, Cranford Ref. POP681343
1919, Crawley Ref. POP681570
1919, Crook Ref. POP683935
1919, Dipple Ref. POP691043
1919, Bolham Ref. POP645559
1946, Waddon Ref. NPO859336
1946, Smallbrook Ref. NPO833110
1919, Lowertown Ref. POP770005
1919, Littletown Ref. POP758357
1919, Meldon Ref. POP777802
1919, Poughill Ref. POP810218
1919, Puddington Ref. POP811400
1919, Northay Ref. POP794159
1946, Brushford Ref. NPO653502
1946, Bonehill Ref. NPO645774
1946, Eastleigh Ref. NPO698670
1946, Exton Ref. NPO702440
1946, Cockwood Ref. NPO673175
1946, Brixton Ref. NPO650614
1900, Pilton Ref. RNC806217

Books

32 books found. Showing results 145 to 168.

Memories

314 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.

South Devon

I lived in Kingskerswell from August 1963 to July 1974, first in Lyndhurst Avenue and then in Weavers Way.

A memory of Kingskerswell in 1963 by Peter Bannister

Life In The 1960's At West Buckland And At South Molton Scho

My name is William, and I lived in West Buckland, North Devon. My family moved there in about 1959 when my dad changed his job again. He worked for a local farmer for about 12 months ...Read more

A memory of South Molton in 1963 by William Braime

A Very New Broadway

In 1962 my parents and I (12 years old) moved from Bristol to open Victoria Wine (later to become the Wine Market before reverting back to Victoria Wine). There were still several empty units awaiting occupation. I can recall ...Read more

A memory of Plymstock in 1962 by cpden

Simple Times

Well our address was quite easy , Fairy Cross, Near Bideford, North Devon. Tel. Horns Cross 328   !! Our mail always found us with no problems at all. There were not a lot of us there in those days. We lived in Headons Cottage, it ...Read more

A memory of Fairy Cross in 1962 by Derek England

Cookham Idyll

I also have many happy memories of life in Cookham. We moved here from Maidenhead and brought up our children in this lovely area. The pubs of Cookham and the Dean were great and we walked for miles enjoying the scenery. We earned money ...Read more

A memory of Cookham in 1961 by Marigold Badcock Nee Perkins

The N.H.S. Early Years To Retirement

The Transport Department at Southmead Hospital when I joined them consisted of an officer, foreman, and four porter drivers, with two buses, three vans, and two cars. We were responsible for supplying ...Read more

A memory of Bristol in 1960 by Arthur Cottrell

The Girl Maureen

She was launched as a rowing lifeboat, Docea Chapman, and came to Padstow as a relief boat. She was only on station for nine moths then laid up. I am the girl Maureen. Father bought her in 1952 and converted her into a fishing boat, ...Read more

A memory of Padstow in 1960 by Maureen Tatlow

Our House!

How funny! We now own and live in this house. It has barely changed since this photograph, although it is no longer a guest house and its name is different. There are some barns and a coach house in the background which have been ...Read more

A memory of Ottery St Mary in 1960 by Robert Baker

Highbridge

I used to fly my control line model planes in the car park shown in the photo. My mother and I lived in Highbridge from 1957 until 1960 when we moved to Burnham. I went to the school in Highbridge and remember the Queen being driven ...Read more

A memory of Highbridge in 1960 by Peter Guala

My Memories Of Lifton

My Memories of Lifton. I was born in 1946 lived in Lifton until I got married in 1971. I lived in Fore Street, next door lived Mr Brown, he used to repair shoes in his little shed in the garden and I used to watch him working. ...Read more

A memory of Lifton in 1960 by Brian Keighley

Captions

227 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.

Caption For Barnstaple, Queen Anne's Walk 1894

Queen Anne's Walk was built in 1709 by Richard Rolle, scion of one of the great landowning families of Devon.

Caption For Calstock, Viaduct 1907

At this date the building of the new 12-arched viaduct across the Tamar is nearly finished, and the construction yard can be seen below on the Devon (right) bank.

Caption For Appledore, Quay 1923

This charming Devon fishing village lies alongside the broad waters of the Torridge River, which swings left just beyond the point to join the Taw and the open sea.

Caption For Honiton, High Street C1960

Before the days of motorways and bypasses, Honiton was the gateway to Devon for travellers coming from the south and east of England, who passed along this long straight road.

Caption For Lyme Regis, 1890

heights of Timber Hill, is situated at the westernmost end of Dorset.Walking through the fields and cliffs of Lyme the visitor can never be quite sure whether he or she is in Dorset or neighbouring Devon

Caption For Newark, The River C1965

In 1968, when work was underway on a new Devon Bridge, timber piles and some stonework were discovered on the river bed.

Caption For Plymouth, Drake's Island 1890

Now in Cornwall, Mount Edgecumbe, from where this picture was taken, was once part of Devon.

Caption For Woolacombe, 1906

This one was built by the Chichester family in the 18th century; it burned Welsh limestone, which was held to be superior to the Devon limestone.

Caption For Newton Ferrers, Bridge End 1931

Both are delightful, with old Devon cob cottages and attractive gardens in an area of fine scenery.

Caption For Colyton, Church 1907

The unusual octagonal lantern was installed in the 15th century when Colyton was one of the three richest wool towns in Devon.

Caption For Badbury Rings, 1899

The trees in the park have all been chamfered up to a certain height to prevent them being grazed by the Bankes family's famous herd of Red Devon cattle.

Caption For Ilfracombe, The Cairn From The West 1911

In 1974 the Devon Trust for Nature Conservation rented the site from the council and turned it into a nature reserve.

Caption For Axmouth, The Village 1898

Before railways and metalled roads, there were only two main routes into Devon.

Caption For Chillington, The Post Office 1904

On 9 and 10 March 1891 the legendary Great Blizzard hit Devon and Cornwall.

Caption For Bideford, The Quay 1890

Once the town manufactured and exported cloth and built ships; it imported tobacco and salted cod, and wool from the Continent for the Devon weaving industry.

Caption For Seaton, Fore Street 1895

Though never one of Devon's more fashionable resorts, it has a charm of its own and an attractive setting.

Caption For Penarth, The Pier 1896

The pier looks out towards the North devon coast. 1907 saw a pavilion built on the seaward end, which was destroyed by fire in the 1930s.

Caption For Beer, Street And New Inn 1901

Note also the pavement is already surfaced - not the most common sight in a Devon village at the start of the 20th century.

Caption For Barnstaple, Haymaking 1890

This photograph epitomises Devon a century ago.

Caption For Croyde, The Bay 1894

Once a sleepy Devon backwater, Croyde's beach and bay was discovered by holidaymakers in the 19th century.

Caption For Seaton, The Beach And Promenade 1898

Seaton is Devon's easternmost resort, with only a few miles of rugged cliffs and landslips separating the town from neighbouring Dorset.

Caption For Seaton, White Cliff From Beach 1898

Though never one of Devon's more fashionable resorts, it has a charm of its own and an attractive setting.

Caption For Arlington, The Post Office C1960

The first round-the-world solo yachtsman Sir Francis Chichester was part of the family, and he is buried in North Devon.

Caption For Newton Abbot, Courtenay Park Bowling Green 1907

Courtenay is the family name of the Earls of Devon, who were the major landowners in the area and responsible for much of the Victorian expansion of Newton Abbot.