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Photos
4 photos found. Showing results 141 to 4.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 169 to 1.
Memories
95 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.
The Day We Topped Out £12m New Leisure Centre In Wednesfield!
£12m Wednesfield Leisure Pool. It has been a very big week for both myself and Mary, we have attended 11 individual events as well as trying to hold the day jobs down! On Monday ...Read more
A memory of Wednesfield by
The Fleetwood I Left Behind
I was born in Fleetwood in 1947 but seemed to oscillate between there and Malaya for a number of years up to the age of 12 just before dad died. My first memories are of starting at Stella Maris convent and then ...Read more
A memory of Fleetwood in 1970 by
The Harbour Line.
Look carefully between the first two trees on the left of the photograph. In the gap with the house in the background you will see a horizontal dark line which follows to the right. This is the railway line called the Harbour Line ...Read more
A memory of Wisbech
The Old Quay, Newlyn
This photograph shows "The Old Quay" which was a medieval construction inside the outer arms of the Newlyn Harbour. Behind the Old Quay is the South Pier and the extreme end of the North Pier shows to the left of the picture ...Read more
A memory of Newlyn in 1955
The Slate Islands Easdale
THE SLATE ISLANDS By Walter Deas Some 24k (15 miles) south and west of Oban lies an area with interesting old ...Read more
A memory of Easdale in 2005 by
The Wade Family Hols
I love Weymouth and would like to retire here one day! We came on holiday in July, bringing our little girl, Isobel, on her first holiday, also two of my other children and other members of the family. I love this picture, ...Read more
A memory of Weymouth in 2012 by
This Is Not The Harbour! This Is Oldway Mansion.
Built by Paris Singer for the dancer Isodora Duncan. In the 1950s I used to play in these landscaped grounds, then and now a municipal park
A memory of Paignton by
Tilehurst 1960s
I was born at 4 Juniper Way, Tilehurst 1962. I lived there until I was 9. I have such warm memories of that time although my memories appear more like snapshots as I was so young I remember some sounds of that time that have ...Read more
A memory of Tilehurst by
To Sea
The Seagoing Years. I must have left the Army sometime in August or September of 1949, and went back to C.J.King & son, tug owners, to carry on with my job as deck boy. This was not to my ...Read more
A memory of Bristol in 1950 by
Visiting The Isle Of Man Railway
Two of my friends i(Bob and Tony) n our Manchester University Hall of Residence were both train buffs and motorcyclists so one early summer weekend in 1967 we rode our bikes on a Friday evening down the "East Lancs ...Read more
A memory of Douglas in 1967 by
Captions
211 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.
The first large property on the left is The Towers, and in front of it is the path leading down to the harbour and Jackson's Bay.
1843; for a further ninety years after this photograph was taken, it offered both a warning and guidance for ships passing north along the white cliffs, and for those heading for Dover harbour
This popular inn on the harbour at St Ives is said to date back to 1312.
Guarding the entrance to Falmouth harbour, this lighthouse was completed in 1835 to the design of the Trinity House engineer James Walker, who also designed the famous Needles Lighthouse on the Isle of
A panoramic view taken from Shakespeare Cliff shows to advantage the sweep of this famous harbour.
The Harbour, the Bridge, St Ann's Staith, Pier Road, the Fish Market, the Piers
Bosham was an important harbour in Anglo-Saxon times; King Harold II sailed from here on his way to Normandy.
This view indicates what an unlikely site Charlestown is for a harbour; yet the little dock was completed in 1801 by Charles Rashleigh, after whom it was named, for exporting china clay and
By 1903, the Red Lion, seen on the far left, has replaced a row of fishermen's cottages, but those beyond mostly survive, one being now The Old Harbour House Tea Rooms.
The upper reaches of both harbours would have provided just such resources for early man in the Portsmouth area and while there is not a lot of evidence of settlement, flints have been identified
The solid lock gates leading into the inner harbour allowed the water levels to be adjusted during any state of the tide, enabling either repairs to be undertaken or the dock to remain flooded at low water
Villagers still use donkeys and sleds to carry goods to and from their cottages and the tiny harbour far below.
The solid lock gates leading into the inner harbour allowed the water levels to be adjusted during any state of the tide, enabling either repairs to be undertaken or the dock to remain flooded at low water
This unusual view of the harbour looks down on the moored boats, and offers insight into their rarely-seen deck gear.
The harbour was developed by the railway companies—wagons of the London Midland Scottish Line are drawn up at the quayside.
Built in 1866 by the Mersey Docks and Harbour Board to provide observations for the benefit of shipping, its records include a full set of observations dating from 1867.
Seahouses grew up in 1889, when the harbour was built to improve the fishing industry in the area.
This tiny stretch, less than a mile long, is all that is left of the grandiose Portsmouth & Arundel Canal, which linked Ford on the River Arun with Chichester and Portsmouth Harbour.
These cottages at Newhaven, Fife, are an example of the type of fishermen's dwelling that could be found around harbours from Scotland to at least Cullercoats in Northumbria, usually single-storey terraces
This tiny stretch, less than a mile long, is all that is left of the grandiose Portsmouth and Arundel Canal, which linked Ford on the River Arun with Chichester and Portsmouth Harbour.
The delivery boy with his basket, lounging against a pillar of the Harbour Office, seems to have adopted a far more natural pose than that of the lad nearest to him or the stiffly standing
It has since developed as a pleasant seaside resort with a lengthy sandy beach and a little harbour.
The masts of trading ships are seen in the harbour; its north pier was to be badly damaged in a north-east gale two years later.
The Nelson in Harbour Street is in the centre of the photograph.
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Memories (95)
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Maps (71)