Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!

Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.

Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.

During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards

Maps

175 maps found.

1899, Major's Green Ref. RNE772554
1900, Ruan Major Ref. RNC821483
1898, Tolleshunt Major Ref. RNC849425
1919, Ruan Major Ref. POP821483
1919, St Columb Major Ref. POP823738
1947, Llantwit Major Ref. NPO759118
1895, Ruan Major Ref. RNE821483
1919, St Andrews' Major Ref. POP823591
1947, St Andrews' Major Ref. NPO823591
1895, St Columb Major Ref. RNE823738
1899-1900, Llantwit Major Ref. RNC759118
1945, Tolleshunt Major Ref. NPO849425
1895, Tolleshunt Major Ref. RNE849425
1895, Tolleshunt Major Ref. HOSM62030
1897, Llantwit Major Ref. HOSM34829
1922, Llantwit Major Ref. POP759118
1921, Tolleshunt Major Ref. POP849425
1946, Ruan Major Ref. NPO821483
1897, Llantwit Major Ref. RNE759118
1880, St Columb Major Ref. HOSM35226

Books

1 books found. Showing results 169 to 1.

Memories

726 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.

Beke Hall Rayleigh And Rawreth

Hi, I am looking for any information on Beke Hall, Rayleigh (sometimes spelt Beak - or with Farm in the title!). It is situated on the left side of London Road out towards Wickford and is first mentioned in 1523. The ...Read more

A memory of Rayleigh

Canal Memories

I grew up at Bulls Bridge and my maiden name was Betty Miles. I went to Western Road school from the age of 5 to 14 and spent all my single life at Bulls Bridge because dad worked for the British Waterways and we had one of the ...Read more

A memory of Southall in 1942 by Jan Theobald

Love That Place!

Born at Petersfield in 1940, my first home was Berry Cottage, down Sandy Lane, opposite Sibley's farm. Berry cottage had only 4 rooms (2 up and 2 down), no running water, only a well and later a tap down in the lane. I remember the ...Read more

A memory of Rake Firs in 1940 by Monica Stewart

Moving Away

I was born in Redhill hospital in 1948 and lived in Shirley Avenue. I went to Downland School which was a stone cottage called Pound Cottage just before Stanley Close. There was Cherry Tree Cottage about 3 doors up, they used to sell ...Read more

A memory of Old Coulsdon by Margaret Collins

Elmore Court The Bronets Of Guise

Elmore Court is a beautiful manor and ancient house with many acres of property which belonged to the Baronets of Elmore, the Guise family, since the 13th century. My great-great-grandfather, Martin George Guise, ...Read more

A memory of Elmore by Miguel De Althaus

Working In Clyffe Pypard

I came down from Scotland when I was 16 & was a nanny in Broad Hinton for a year for Mr & Mrs Huddy (can't remember the name of the house), & then I decided that I wanted to work with horses, so I got a job ...Read more

A memory of Clyffe Pypard in 1969 by Alison Cloy

Laneswood The Home

As quite young boys of then 7 and 6, my brother and I with our parents, over Christmas in 1945 soon after the end of WWII came across from Holland, to visit our grand-parents who lived in "Laneswood", a true manor house standing ...Read more

A memory of Mortimer by Jan Willem Van Weel

Our Camelot...

Our little family of Mom, Dad, (Nan and Tom Mackie) my four year old sister Dorothy and myself seven years older, moved from the North to U Slaughter where my Dad and Mom were hired as butler/valet to Major Witts (Dad) and cook ...Read more

A memory of Upper Slaughter in 1948 by Gwenneth Steward

Nicholson Family

My mother, Mary Nicholson, was the daughter of Otho Francis Macmahon Nicholson, the son of Henry Donaldson Nicholson. My mother met my father, a first generation South African, during World War 2 when he served in the Merchant ...Read more

A memory of Tavistock by Elizabeth Croeser

The Cat And Bagpipes Inn

My parents Pat and Eric Metcalfe ran the Cat and Bagpipes for about five years from 1960, I was about 10 years old when we moved there and I went to Harlesy Village School. I remember Philip Robinson and his sister ...Read more

A memory of East Harlsey in 1960 by Angela Bass

Captions

689 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.

Caption For Petersfield, The Spain C1965

In the centre stands Hylton House, home of the last Lords of the Manor, later to become Seager House School, a girls' school evacuated from Hayling Island at the start of World War II, and then Moreton

Caption For Linlithgow, Palace 1897

David I built a manor at Linlithgow, and next to it a church dedicated to St Michael. In 1301 Edward Longshanks set about rebuilding and heavily fortifying the palace.

Caption For Duntisbourne Leer, C1965

Just along the road from Duntisbourne Abbots is the village of Duntisbourne Leer, named after the great Normandy Abbey at Lire which once owned the manor.

Caption For Prestbury, The Church 1896

Inside the largely 15th-century building, beside memorials to the lords of the manor, the Leghs of Adlington, there are early 18th-century wall paintings in the spandrels between the

Caption For Brent Knoll, The Village 1913

This lane leads from the main through road to the church and Manor House. The house on the left has been demolished, and the lane now has modern houses on both sides.

Caption For Irby, Thingwall Road C1955

The lovely stone building on the extreme left is Manor Farm, which F C Beazley described in his book on Thurstaston as 'a little gem'; unfortunately, it has been demolished, and a rather incongruous-looking

Caption For Beoley, Main Road C1965

In 1140 the Norman Lord of the Manor, Geoffrey of Limesey, built a church (probably on the site of a Saxon one) dedicated to St Leonard, patron saint of prisoners and, appropriately enough, of iron workers

Caption For Brambletye, Castle 1906

This ruinous Jacobean manor house, about half a mile north-west of Forest Row, was built in 1631 for Sir Henry Crompton, MP for East Grinstead.

Caption For Bainbridge, The Rose And Crown C1960

the Rose and Crown Hotel is a landmark on the main road through Wensleydale in the village of Bainbridge, once the 'capital' of Upper Wensleydale, which was known in the 12th century as the Forest and Manor

Caption For Goring, Village 1899

Opposite the well-known Miller of Mansfield hotel and pub, mainly Georgian with older parts, is the Goring Free Church, dated 1893, on the corner of Manor Road, still looking pretty fresh in this view

Caption For Cressing, The Village 1909

This was the earliest English settlement of the Knights Templar, who were given the manor in 1135. Cressing is known today for its medieval barns at nearby Cressing Temple.

Caption For Buriton, 1898

Edward Gibbon, the historian who wrote 'The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire', lived at the Manor House as a child.

Caption For Walton Le Dale, St Leonard's Church C1955

The manor was granted to Robert Bannastre by Henry de Lacy in the 12th century.

Caption For Brockweir, The Village C1955

The three-storey gabled Manor House dates from the 16th century and faces onto the bridge.

Caption For Faringdon, Market Place C1955

King Alfred had a royal manor here and King John granted the town a charter for a weekly market.

Caption For Potterne, Porch House 1898

It was once a manor of the Bishops of Salisbury. This is the late 15th-century timber-framed Porch House, pictured about 20 years after its last restoration.

Caption For Mells, The Memorial C1950

Further up the hill from the manor is the very fine war memorial, designed by Lutyens in c1920. The central column is crowned by the figure of St George and the Dragon.

Caption For Harlow, Mill 1903

The 17th-century mill at Harlow was part of the manor of Harlowbury. It was the main source of power to grind corn and other purposes for the parish at that time.

Caption For Bexhill On Sea, Walnut Tree 1903

Bexhill's famous walnut tree began life within the manor grounds. Late in Victorian times the road was widened, and the tree became a prominent roadside landmark.

Caption For Kettering, The Church C1960

This village-like landscape is a reminder of the old centre of Kettering, which clustered around the Manor House and the church. There are now only a few gravestones left in the re-organised area.

Caption For Runswick, Bay 1929

In the cliff that was used for the mine there was a cave, Hob Holes: legend had it that a hob man, or goblin, lived there who could cure whooping cough.

Caption For Raglan, The Castle From Moat 1893

King Henry VII spent some of his childhood at Raglan, where the two Williams had transformed a fortified rural manor into a castle fit for a future king.

Caption For Old Swinford, Hagley Road C1955

Old Swinford is a suburb of Stourbridge today, which represents a reversal of fortune: the Domesday Book (1086) recorded Stourbridge as part of the manor of 'Suineford'.

Caption For Torquay, Princess Gardens 1896

Torquay's inner harbour was built by Sir Lawrence Palk, son of Sir Robert Palk, who bought the manor of Torwood in 1768.