Places
12 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
191 photos found. Showing results 141 to 160.
Maps
115 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 169 to 1.
Memories
1,374 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.
A Short Stay In Broadstairs
I stayed in a convalescent home in the early 1950's as it was believed I had had whooping cough and was there for the fresh air. I only have fleeting memories but do recall a large dormitory with high beds and falling out! ...Read more
A memory of Broadstairs by
A Summer Outing To Dawlish Warren
It seems to be a wet summer this year but at long last a day when it wasn't actuially raining at breakfast time! We set off from our home in Tiverton to give granddaughter Anna a day at the seaside. The ...Read more
A memory of Dawlish Warren in 2008 by
Abc Eltham High Street.
I saw Dr. Who and the Daleks, in the Summer of 1965 at the ABC (or 'The Picture Palace' as my father called it). I was about 10 years of age. The movie poster showing on the cinema, the support movie anyway, in your photo is Bikini ...Read more
A memory of Eltham
Atwick Holidays
Our family (from Bradford) would rent one of the chalets on the cliff top at the end of Cliff Road, 2nd in on the left I think. Me and my 2 sisters would walk down to the farm at the end of the road for fresh milk. Each year the garden ...Read more
A memory of Atwick in 1954 by
Abergele Beach & Town Circa 1965
Looking at this photo, I'm taken back to summers on that beach full of pebbles and the cafe shown with its novel smell, something like milky coffee! At about this time Abergele had a cinema, upstairs in the market ...Read more
A memory of Abergele in 1965 by
Activity Centre For Children In The 1960s
I can remember stayiing at a camp with wooden huts for children in the 1960s. My father died when I was nine and Notts. Social Services arranged for me and my brother to have a holiday. Although I was ...Read more
A memory of Hythe in 1962
Acton In The 1950/60’s
I lived in The Vale flats from 1953. First in Beech Avenue and then Larch Avenue. I first went to East Acton school before John Perryn and finally Bromyard Avenue, which was later renamed Faraday School just before I left in 1966. I ...Read more
A memory of Acton by
After The War Was Over
Just after the war during our summer holidays I was sent from Rochester (where we lived at that time, Dad having been demobbed and then working at Short Bros on the airport), together with my trusty Hercules cycle to spend the ...Read more
A memory of St Blazey in 1940 by
Albert Hern
My grandfather was Albert Hern. He built the houses on the cliffe - Belgrave. He lived in the end house still standing. He was well known. I lived at 10 Beach Terrace as a child (now gone ) and revisited many times.
A memory of Heacham in 1956 by
Aldbrough Cliffs 1955
HI. Nice to see the photo and comment . I was born in 1945 ,half a mile inland at the crescent, an half circle of 15 brick bungalows. probably built in the mid 1930's. I worked on the Farm mentioned it was called Mount pleasant ...Read more
A memory of Aldbrough by
Captions
1,131 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.
Here you can see the wide range of entertainment on offer on the beach. On the left, the tea tent was run by the Castle Coffee House, based in Castle Street.
Close to the point where the cliffs begin to rise from the beach at Southwold is the Sailor's Reading Room.
This view shows Carbis Bay when it was still largely undeveloped, with just a scattering of houses above the cliffs overlooking the sandy beach.
The photographer has moved in closer to the beach to take this picture, although still concentrating on the same area as the former one.The Shrubbery Gardens, above the sun shelter, are well used
This photograph was taken from Gyllyngvase Beach. In the middle distance is Swanpool Point; hidden beyond it is Swanpool Beach, another favoured smuggling spot.
The timber-framed Tudor Moot Hall is situated next to the beach.
The 'togetherness' of these Margate beach crowds was legendary; the whole beach was once heard to erupt into song:'Yes, we have no bananas …'
The 'Droch' or Cave of Beauty is regarded as the finest at Lydstep Cavern Beach.
The line of beach-huts makes a striking background to this picture of a father and son sea fishing from the pebbly beach.
This view of East Cliff, with well-clad visitors strolling along the beach, and sailing boats drawn up on the shore, shows a south coast beach before development and formalisation changed its character
As the beach huts suggest, its long beach is popular with bathers and promenaders.
The little valley of Trenarren reaches the coast just to the west of Black Head, and the stream cascades over the cliff onto the beach.
Sidmouth's pebbly beach has never deterred sea bathers and paddlers, though building sandcastles was a harder task.
During the first quarter of the 20th century Worthing's beach was very popular with visitors and inhabitants alike.
Wildersmouth Bay was the original bathing beach of the town; those beaches to the west only became accessible after the drafting in of Welsh miners to dig the tunnels by which they are now reached.
Then, as now, the beach was popular with children, who here play at the water's edge whilst older boys admire the moored fishing boat.
Studland has one of the best and least tampered-with beaches in Dorset - a real reminder of those halcyon days when such luminaries as George III promoted the merits of sea bathing.
Lines of wind shelters adorn the beach at the popular Yorkshire coast resort of Filey. Once a fashionable beach accessory, they are seldom seen today, so perhaps it was windier in the Fifties!
Still a popular beach today, particularly with locals, the Pebble Ridge is a long low expanse protecting the entrance to the Taw and Torridge estuary.
Outdoor holidays are being pioneered here, with just a few tents and caravans on the edge of the beach at Sconhoe Farm.
Many a local will remember learning to drive for the first time on this huge beach near Porthmadog, although summer access is now a little more restricted than we see here.
Cadgwith is an important fishing cove, especially for shellfish; boats are hauled up the beach – there is no quay.
'Tommy's Pit', built at the end of the breakwater, was strictly men only, while women used Crooklets beach, then named Maer Beach. Mixed bathing did not come about until after World War One.
These boats up on the pink shingle beach are probably rowing boats for hire - they were painted red, white and blue.
Places (12)
Photos (191)
Memories (1374)
Books (1)
Maps (115)