Places
16 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Goose Green, Cumbria
- Goose Green, Norfolk
- Goose Green, Hampshire
- Goose Hill, Hampshire
- Goose Eye, Yorkshire
- Goose Green, Avon
- Goose Green, Hertfordshire
- Goose Green, Greater Manchester
- Goose Green, Sussex (near Billingshurst)
- Goose Pool, Hereford & Worcester
- Goose Green, Lancashire (near Freckleton)
- Goose Green, Sussex (near Petersfield)
- Goose Green, Essex (near Bradfield)
- Goose Green, Essex (near Great Bentley)
- Goose Green, Kent (near Tonbridge)
- Goose Green, Kent (near Tenterden)
Photos
17 photos found. Showing results 121 to 17.
Maps
100 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,069 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.
Saturday Mornings
I lived in Albert Road Caversham Heights from 1948 aged 5. Went to school at Hemdean Road infants then on to Caversham Secondary Modern and left there in 1959. I really enjoyed school, especially maths, history and geography, the ...Read more
A memory of Caversham by
Rutland Road
Hi, came on this site by accident, I was born at 12 Rutland Rd in 1966 and had wonderful memories of playing in the street ( unheard of now ) and the jubilee park and library, off to the "top shops " on Allenby road, anyone remember the ...Read more
A memory of Southall by
Eureka Place
Hello, I grew up in 43 Eureka Place Ebbw Vale, my father bought it in 1964 when it had been empty and derelict for some time. My sister who is 6 years older than me remembers big windows advertising all manner of goods including Typhoo ...Read more
A memory of Ebbw Vale by
Were You At Port Regis Convent Or Similar Catholic Schools Or Convents 1950s 1970’s
Hello I was at Port Regis between 1953 - 1955 I was 7 when I got there and left just before my 10th birthday. Was anyone else at Port Regis, Broadstairs when it was a convent for ...Read more
A memory of Broadstairs in 1955 by
Childhood Memories Great Bardfield 1969
My late parents were the landlord and landlady of the Vine public house. I was just coming into teenage years. Friends came from the base who lived in the village. The pub itself was refurbished in that ...Read more
A memory of Great Bardfield in 1969 by
The Happiest Days Of Your Life
Brambletye school, well set between the beautiful Ashdown Forest and thriving town of East Grinstead on the Sussex/Surrey border was a paradise on Earth for any schoolboy with an aesthetically romantic (!) ...Read more
A memory of Brambletye House in 1959 by
The Fox And Goose Public House
Hello from Australia. I was hoping that someone looking through these "memories" might remember The Fox and Goose Public House on Penn Road. I think that this is the picture of it. My mom was the cleaner there ...Read more
A memory of Penn by
Those Were The Days
I remember Rye Lane in Peckham as a very busy shopping centre. I was born in the area and lived in Mcdermott Road in the prefabs (it is now a Charlie Dimock Garden) until I married in Blenheim Grove Church (behind the station)and ...Read more
A memory of Peckham by
Early Years Of My Life
I was born in 1936 in Shipley nursing home and we lived at 1 The Green, Micklethwaite until 1944. My father died in 1941 and my mother was left with me and brother John, surname Walker, to bring up on her own. I ...Read more
A memory of Micklethwaite in 1930 by
Tuckers Cafe Commercial Street.
I well remember their delicious very large cream puffs, we would try to make them last as long as possible while friends and I sat and enjoyed them; also their goose loaves - so crispy. My husband Terry and I emigrated ...Read more
A memory of Maesteg in 1950 by
Captions
195 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.
In the village are a good variety of houses, including the early 16th-century rectory, and Hallside Grove, a Gothicised house of quality.
The whitewashed Royal Oak (right) has a recessed centre to provide a small forecourt for benches; beyond is No 24, a good Georgian house with a mansard roof.
To the left of Frith's photographer are the grounds of West Hannay House, built as a rectory in 1727 in a good Baroque Hawksmoor-ish style, and behind him the lane leads to St James's parish church, which
Horwood's fancy goods shop is on the corner with Bedford Street (right). The street nameplate, of which several survive, is a peculiarity of Stroud.
W B Moss was a general dry goods store of quality, and the Consumers Tea Co next door offered a bewildering array of teas and coffees.
Chaplins, owners of the lorry outside the Joy Shop in picture L20007, carried goods not only for the Southern Railway but also for the Great Western, in whose premises they had their depot.
The setting is not as good as it was in the 1890s, for the houses to the right, out of view, were replaced by awful 1960s shops with offices over.
It contains some good townscape, but it is somewhat traffic- blighted, more so now than in this 1950s view, which looks east along the High Street towards Market Square.
However, the sands provide a good place to fish with nets, as we can see in the middle right.
He would be armed with a heavy club; part of his duties was to check on vagrants and strangers, who would not be admitted unless they could give a good account of themselves.
Cavendish Road, which runs from Brighton Road east to Langley Park Road, is a good example of the earlier phases of suburban growth in Sutton.
Chalfont St Giles retains much more of its heritage and character than its southern neighbour, Chalfont St Peter, with a High Street lined with good buildings, a pond and the parish church
Although devoid of good monuments, the interior is of some interest.
This architecture is not exciting, but very user-friendly: a corner shop with others adjacent, each with their good timber fronts, and on the opposite side of the road The Bell pub, making up a standard
Now the roofless romantic ruin stands where once stood the mansion of the 'fair, and wise and good'.
It is of textured concrete and twelve storeys high, much disliked locally, but in fact a rather good design by Fred Pooley, the then County Architect.
In this view we see the rather good Art Deco 'Butlins Ingoldmells Hotel', now brutally changed.
Jabez Goode was an interesting man who lived in Burgh le Marsh in Victorian times.
incorporated in the city boundaries in 1932, but only the east side, a strip along the north side, and a strip along the west side were developed for housing; the city retained a goodly
To its right is Trinity House, a good stone house in the style of a William Butterfield rectory, built as the manse by J Woodman, who had designed the church.
The Red Lion Hotel (left) offers good food and public entertainment. The Bath Hotel (centre) is situated on the site of Bath House, which was smashed into pieces by a very high tide in 1836.
There is a good range of Tudor and 17th-century timber- framed houses on the right, all with rendered fronts.
The water wheel appears to be in good order, and the fine brick stack displays stone drip courses.
The telephone box is still in the same position, although a new brick-based post box has been installed, and goods for sale have now spilled out onto the pavement.
Places (16)
Photos (17)
Memories (1069)
Books (0)
Maps (100)