Maps

471 maps found.

1897, Forest-In-Teesdale Ref. RNE708010
1903-1904, Forest Becks Ref. RNC707830
1897-1899, Forest Gate Ref. RNC707877
1897-1902, Forest Gate Ref. RNC707879
1898-1909, Forest Green Ref. RNC707884
1898-1899, Forest Hill Ref. RNC707898
1897-1899, Forest Hill Ref. RNC707899
1903-1904, Forest Moor Ref. RNC707934
1899-1909, Forest Side Ref. RNC707965
1897-1900, Liss Forest Ref. RNC756742
1902-1903, Macclesfield Forest Ref. RNC771315
1897-1909, New Forest Ref. RNC789752
1901-1902, Wyre Forest Ref. RNC875300
1898, Tilgate Forest Row Ref. RNC848391
1921, Leicester Forest East Ref. POP754743
1925, Forest-In-Teesdale Ref. POP708010
1940, Tilgate Forest Row Ref. NPO848391
1946, Leicester Forest East Ref. NPO754743
1940, St Leonard's Forest Ref. NPO824042
1925, Forest Lane Head Ref. POP707911

Books

2 books found. Showing results 145 to 2.

Memories

432 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.

The Local Bobby

In 1932 my father Len James was moved to Brockenhurst as the 'village bobby'. I was born in 1931 and my brother in 1929. We lived in the Police house (now a renovated private home) and eventually both us boys went to the C of ...Read more

A memory of Brockenhurst in 1930 by Len James

The Wrekin

In the 50s/60s we would go and spend the day on the Wrekin. We would cycle from our home on Charlton Hill and leave our bikes at the Forest Glen (no need to lock them up) and make our way up the first part of the climb which was ...Read more

A memory of Donnington by Margaret Clutton

Park Crescent, The Rise, Sunningdale.

I was born in 1954 and lived at Park Crescent until I was 18. I went to Holy Trinity School at Sunningdale. Mr Pitts was headmaster and I remember Mr Jenn, Mrs Challis and Mr Williams. My sister Gean used ...Read more

A memory of Sunningdale in 1960 by Liz Goss

Padnell Avenue Etc.

We were the first family to move into the newly built Padnell Avenue Council Estate, moving there in around 1947, our house was one of a pair on the corner of Winscombe Avenue. Where the Council flats are now situated was ...Read more

A memory of Cowplain by Michael Dewey

Stokesleys 2nd. Fire Station

For the information of readers, it may be of interest to note that the building just past the Town Hall Block, left side, was known as the Shambles and in the 1800s and early 1900s was open fronted and used as a ...Read more

A memory of Stokesley in 1920 by Alan Swales

Highgate

I used to stay in Beverley with my Aunt who lived at 45 Highgate. She used to knit toys and sell them at her front door, the money she raised went to Beverley Minster to buy cassocks for the choir. Her name was Gertie Forest, she lived ...Read more

A memory of Beverley by Margaret Richardson

Dancing On The Forest For The Queens Visit To Nottingham

I think it was 1953 and I was 10yrs. I was at the Bentink Road Scool and as I remember, the schools in Nottingham entered a dancing team and we practiced for weeks. Our practice was in ...Read more

A memory of Nottingham in 1953 by Margaret Wilson Nee Rigley

Forest Rd School

Does anybody that attended the school at that time have any photos, also anybody that might have joined the Binfield Scouts in 1953/4 i would love to hear from anybody that remembers Mr & Mrs A Pear who brought me up we ...Read more

A memory of Binfield in 1949 by Anthony Whitlock

1950 61 A Child's Memory Of Kirkconnel

On 11th October 1950 I was born in the flat above Drife's butchers shop in Kirkconnel. My dad, Tommy, worked in the shop with Cameron Purvis and struggled to feed a family of three on the butcher's wage and ...Read more

A memory of Kelloholm by Jim Smith

Charnwood Forest Children's Convalescent Home, Summer 1950

It was July/August of 1950 when I was sent here from my home town of Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent at the age of eight, to convalesce after a serious post-operative infection. My first ...Read more

A memory of Woodhouse Eaves by Eric Brass

Captions

372 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.

Caption For Ascot, High Street 1906

Ascot, close to the Surrey border and situated in a wooded corner of the county that was once part of the ancient Windsor Forest, has a strong suburban feel to it, with an abundance of Edwardian

Caption For Ascot, High Street 1906

Ascot, close to the Surrey border and situated in a wooded corner of the county that was once part of the ancient Windsor Forest, has a strong suburban feel to it, with an abundance of Edwardian

Caption For Dodington, The Hall 1929

The house dates from 1591, and stands on the site of a pre-Norman manor held by Dodo, a royal forester under Edward the Confessor and from whom the village takes its name.

Caption For Burley, Cross And Post Office C1960

A penny-farthing can be seen leaning against the front of the cycle stores in the centre of Burley, which John Wise described in 1863 as 'one of the most primitive of (New) Forest hamlets'.

Caption For West Bridgford, Bridgford Hotel C1965

This downstream view, taken from almost the same vantage point as N50079, shows the ugly and large hotel built in the intervening fifteen years close to both Trent Bridge cricket ground and Nottingham Forest's

Caption For Little Budworth, St Peter's Church C1960

Within its parish lies one of the few remaining survivals of genuinely ancient forest and heathland, now a Site of Special Scientific Interest.

Caption For Westdean, 1921

On its no-through road in a short valley leading to the Cuckmere River, it feels amazingly isolated amid the Friston Forest.

Caption For Poole, Bay Hollow, Rockley Sands C1965

Rockley Jetty Point, with its rail link, is across the water, with Holton Heath and Wareham Forest in the distance.

Caption For Ringwood, The Millstream 1900

Ringwood's market brought country folk from far and wide to the town with their goods; it also became famous for the sale of New Forest ponies.

Caption For Lyndhurst, Swan Green C1955

You cannot leave Lyndhurst in any direction without going through some of the best parts of the New Forest.

Caption For Frosterley, Front Street C1955

Situated to the west of Wolsingham on the A689, Frosterley used to be called Forest Lea.

Caption For New Forest, Queens Bower 1908

Nobody knows for sure why this delightful corner of the Forest is called Queen's Bower. The origins of the name are lost in the mists of antiquity.

Caption For Brockenhurst, St Nicholas' Church 1959

In the churchyard is the grave of 'Brusher' Mills, the famous New Forest snake-catcher.

Caption For Nottingham, The Forest Racecourse 1893

The last meeting on the Forest took place on 30th September 1890.

Caption For Redditch, Alcester Street 1949

Redditch appears in an ancient document describing the Perambulation of Feckenham Forest in 1300 as Le Red Dych.

Caption For Rockingham, The Castle C1960

Above the village of Rockingham lies the splendid castle, built by William the Conqueror on the site of an ancient fortress and at the heart of the great Rockingham Forest.

Caption For Ascott Under Wychwood, C1950

stream, stands a string of villages all 'under Wychwood', that ancient wood that still remains one of the most extensive stretches of woodland in Oxfordshire, but which in earlier times was a substantial forest

Caption For Alton, Church Street 1898

The pale-coloured cottages, where a man is standing in a doorway (centre right), were pulled down to make way for the Foresters' Hall, the home of the Electric Picture Theatre and other events.

Caption For Knaresborough, Market Day 1921

things: the oldest woollen mill in England, Mother Shipton, a 15th-century prophetess who allegedly forecast motorcars and aircraft, and Blind Jack Metcalf, born in 1717, who was a soldier, roadbuilder, forest

Caption For Fordingbridge, Bridge Street C1955

Situated on the north-western edge of the New Forest, Fordingbridge was once famous for the manufacture of canvas and sail cloth.

Caption For Hartfield, The Village 1906

It is a delightful village on the northern edge of Ashdown Forest above the river Medway.

Caption For Binfield, The Stag And Hounds 1892

He described Forest Road, seen to the left, as “smooth as a die”. Except for tarmac roads the scene has changed very little.

Caption For Ringwood, The Millstream 1900

Before William's invasion this land was held by Earl Tostig, but four hydes of land from the original ten were seized for the creation of the Norman hunting forest.

Caption For Rowlands Castle, Village From The Arch C1955

Nearby is Stansted Forest, where Richard the Lionheart is believed to have hunted.