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 141 to 17.
Maps
100 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,071 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.
Kings Langley
The first 8 plus years of my life were spent here at Merrow Down, off the Common. The only time we were away was for a few months in 1939-40 during the Phoney War. I had various nannies, the best being Flora. She came about autumn ...Read more
A memory of Timberscombe in 1940 by
Pre Student And Nurse
I worked at the Hospital from 1954 to 1958. My first ward was the Rheumatic Fever Unit for children. Prof: Bywater. Chief Rheumatologist. I remember that the visiting hours were Sunday 2.00pm till 400pm. So hard for the little ...Read more
A memory of Taplow in 1954 by
A Saturday Ramble At Fingle Bridge For The Morris Dancers
The Heather and Gorse Clog Dancers organised a ramble to celebrate the New Year and so we met on a beautiful sunny January Saturday at the Fingle Bridge Inn. My wife Elizabeth and I ...Read more
A memory of Drewsteignton in 2009 by
Duke Of Wellington
My wife Gail and I had our 2nd son born at the 'Duke', we were licencees for about 3 years till around the end of 1980. We met some great people and have good memories. I wonder what happened to 'Johnny and the Jailbirds' ... and ...Read more
A memory of Stanwick in 1978 by
Yorkshire
Hello all you Yorkshire people, wherever you may now be... Here is a poem I wrote about good old York. Enjoy. Shopping in the Shambles on a snowy Christmas Eve Playing hide and seek in Acomb Wood Watching Andy Pandy by the fire in our front ...Read more
A memory of York in 1955 by
Growing Up In Tranmere
I grew up in Oriel Road in Lower Tranmere. My nan lived across the road from us. When I was 5 (1951) she had a stroke and my mum spent the next 5 years looking after her until she died, when I was about 10. In those days, there ...Read more
A memory of Tranmere by
Wartime Fleetwood
My father was a police officer and we lived in Victoria Street, next door to the market. Our house, No 19, is now a cafe and sometimes I have a coffee there when I visit. Fleetwood was buzzing during the war. Seamen, sailors, ...Read more
A memory of Fleetwood in 1940 by
Knott End In The 1950s And The 1960s By Norma Smith
We, that is my father Norman, mother Ethel and my Auntie Peg, moved to Knott End in 1948 and lived at 15 The Esplanade. As well as being a boarding house (as it was called in those days) it ...Read more
A memory of Knott End-on-Sea in 1950 by
Born In A Very Special Place
I was born in Dalkeith in 1936 and shortly after moved to 17 Gibralter Terrace, Dalkieth, Midlothian, Scotland. I was the fourth to be born and already had an older sister by 5 years and two older brothers. By the time I ...Read more
A memory of Dalkeith in 1930 by
Captions
195 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.
Good old Chelmsford: straightforward, practical, and aware of civic duty.
But luckily 'there was a good dance after dinner, which exactly suited me.' Sam was busy at his publisher's office in London and could not come.
Newnham Pool was a good amenity in its day, but its use was severely restricted by the climate, and the decision was taken to build an indoor pool as soon as funds became available.
The photograph shows one of several good 18th-century brick houses to be found in the village.
The Colonial & American Meat Stores (right) are next to the emporium owned by Charles Cox, which is followed by Watson's, selling toys and fancy goods.
Liptons, an early example of a chain store, sold similar goods.
Its good timber-framed house behind remains; it is currently awaiting repair (October 2001).
We can see that twenty-six years after its completion, the sea wall is as good as ever. The tower was known locally as Smith's Folly.
It was formerly an important harbour, shipping a variety of goods. It is an ancient place, originally Segontium, a Roman fortress constructed in AD 78.
In the photograph, a butcher's shop front (left) with its rather flimsy canopy has been built into a rather good 17th- century cottage.
He and his wife, Anne, had fourteen children, and his youngest, Joshua, carved a good monument to John Whatton in Leicester Cathedral.
Co-operative stores sprang up everywhere in places like Bedwas to bring affordable shopping to the valley areas, where they were often the main or only source of groceries and goods.
On the right is the Mole Valley Council Offices, opened in 1984; the building is not in keeping with the character of the town, but architecturally it is a good design.
An attractive village south of the railway line and the River Wreake, Frisby has a number of good houses.
Crosby Mill is a good example of a tower mill, a design that appeared after the post mill was established.
The car auctions were a magnet to young drivers from miles around looking for a good bargain.
Under the church tower can be seen the former Hilltop Wine Bar, its fake timbering hiding a good example of 17th-century framing, while to the left of the tower is a fine house by Sir Ernest George.
Communal action and a progressive Town Council aided development with the building of promenades, bandstands, concert halls and the provision of a good water supply and drainage.
In 1792, a company was formed by Lancaster merchants; they saw a canal as a way of getting cheap coal from Wigan and getting other goods out to the towns in the heart of Lancashire, and to the growing
This photograph is a good general view of the chapel looking from the north-west.
A 16th-century survey lists the gatehouse and gates as being in ruins and two towers and the domestic quarters as being in good repair.
It is a large church which can seat over 400 people; it is built on land given by the nuns of the Priory of Our Lady of Good Counsel. It was completed by 1930.
Councillors and Council staff vigorously argued that this represented a good deal for residents and for the site. Local residents remained resolutely unconvinced.
A good example of Early English style can be found in the tomb of Sir William Wroughton, 1559, which has a canopy and inscription in a fine strapwork cartouche.
Places (16)
Photos (17)
Memories (1071)
Books (0)
Maps (100)