Maps

566 maps found.

1946, Smokey Row Ref. NPO833444
1925, Moor Row Ref. POP783226
1940, Chapel Row Ref. NPO666562
1947, Dean Row Ref. NPO689272
1901, Pott Row Ref. RNC810082
1946, Pott Row Ref. NPO810082
1947, Nether Row Ref. NPO788755
1947, New Row Ref. NPO790331
1947, Low Row Ref. NPO768486
1925, Garth Row Ref. POP711931
1947, High Row Ref. NPO733448
1940, Higher Row Ref. NPO734180
1946, Gipsy Row Ref. NPO713933
1921, Spooner Row Ref. POP836533
1919, Rotten Row Ref. POP820454
1925, Row Brow Ref. POP820983
1925, Ratten Row Ref. POP813614
1924, Ratten Row Ref. POP813616
1922, Ratten Row Ref. POP813617
1922, Wereham Row Ref. POP863416

Books

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Memories

1,283 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.

Visitation Convent

I was a boarder at the Convent for four years 1954-58, cured me of religion as I hated almost every minute of it. The Nuns can only be described as brutal. I was once told that I was wicked because I had kept the other lads awake at ...Read more

A memory of Bridport by Alan Yardley

The Monotype

I came across this when I was hoping to find reference to the Royal visit by the Duke of York. Although I found a film about his visit to the Monotype works at Salfords unfortunately it isn't dated. However, my grandparents Henry ...Read more

A memory of Salfords by Clive Goddard

The Old Baths

My memories of the old Dewsbury swimming baths (at the back of the police station) feels like memories from an earlier era older than myself. I used to visit the baths with my school once a wk for swimming lessons/excerise. I was always ...Read more

A memory of Dewsbury in 1969 by Ann Hart

Hop Picking

Paddock Wood, in particular Beltring, the home of the famous Whitebread Oasts, was the centre of the Hop Gardens of Kent. The Gardens were set out with rows of elevated wire tressles which were supported at intervals by poles. In the ...Read more

A memory of Paddock Wood in 1940 by Michael Willcocks

My Hometown

I was born in 1928 at Woodhill, Gressenhall and moved to Dereham at the age of 6yrs and left when I married some 20 years later. It was a happy childhood in spite of the war years, in fact it added to the excitement of those years, ...Read more

A memory of Dereham in 1940 by Tony Blades

By The Cut

born in 1948 in a place called Cappenfield near Bilston, just off Dudley street, just four houses in a row surrounded by fields,, the canal, or cut, as we all called it ran alongside, and it narrowed down to what we called the stop,it was where ...Read more

A memory of Tipton by John Groucutt

Early Career Memories At Piccadilly Circus.

I started my career in January 1959 as a young bobby at West End Central Police Station Savile Row.  The trestles positioned to the east of 'Eros' which cordon off the road suggest the photograph was taken when ...Read more

A memory of London in 1959 by Claire Allen

Frewins Cottages And Frewins Row

Looking on the Henley Census Info site, I found a reference to Frewins Cottages and Frewins Row. Frewin is my mother's maiden name and the family seem to have been in Henley for over 200 years. Being an unusual ...Read more

A memory of Henley-on-Thames by Peter Francis

My Memories Of Resolven.

The personal views of Resolven expressed in these pages reflect my own fond memories of Resolven, the Vale of Neath and its people. In 1953 I returned to the valley as a teenager, little did I know it was to become my home. I worked ...Read more

A memory of Resolven by Barry S Britzman

Weekends At Chapel Row

I didn't live in Bucklebury but was born in Cold Ash where I lived prior to moving to Thatcham. Unfortunately my father died as the result of a motor cycle accident when I was eight years old, and social care being what it was ...Read more

A memory of Bucklebury by grahamfsmith

Captions

827 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.

Caption For Whitby, Watching The Fishing Fleet C1955

The Friendship Rowing club have moved their pontoon down river from their previous anchorage, as seen in

Caption For Dartmouth, Quay 1899

The row of shops and houses was built in the late 16th and early 17th centuries on the New Quay, which, as the name suggests, had only just been reclaimed from tidal mud.

Caption For Cambridge, Jesus Lock 1925

The river above here is that which flows past the colleges, travelled on there at a much more leisurely rate by rowing boats and punts.

Caption For Mullion, 1939

By this time the rowing gigs and sailing luggers were being replaced by boats with engines, some of which can be seen pulled up on the slipway.

Caption For Bamford, 1919

This view of Bamford's Main Road is largely unchanged today - the rows of semi-detached villas still line the street as it climbs up towards the parish church, hidden in the trees to the right.

Caption For Henley On Thames, Elizabethan Houses

A RAC or AA motorcycle rider, without his motorbike, is walking past a row of Elizabethan houses in Friday Street.

Caption For Haslemere, Shepherds Hill 1888

This steep curving road is celebrated for its row of 17th-, 18th- and 19th-century cottages in tile-hung brick and stucco, which stagger uphill raised above the roadway in traditional Surrey fashion.

Caption For Barry Island, Whitmore Bay 1900

Rowing boats offering trips around the bay, boat shops drawn up on the beach and donkey rides were some of the attractions on offer at the Island.

Caption For Bletchingley, The Village 1886

This view is of Middle Row of Church Walk, a cobbled alley which leads to the parish church at the east, and has little changed today.

Caption For Abingdon, Stert Street 1893

The punts and rowing boats have long since disappeared, and the Boat House has been demolished, though the landing stage is still used by Thames pleasure steamers from Oxford.

Caption For Southend On Sea, The Boating Lake C1945

Canoes and rowing boats could be hired on the part closer to the pier.The Victorian Pier Pavilion can be seen in the background.

Caption For Finedon, The Village C1950

Rows of houses and quaint ironstone cottages line the street; in the distance is the familiar figure of the local postman out making his deliveries.

Caption For Ten Mile Bank, The Village C1955

The village's name derives from a long bank along the river Ouse, on the right of the photograph, defending the low-lying land from flooding.

Caption For Howth, Harbour And Front 1897

Rowing boats are moored in the harbour.

Caption For Chester, Watergate Row 1863

In the late 19th century, the writers of tourist guides such as Baedeckers considered the Rows in Watergate Street to be the poor relations of those in other parts of the city.

Caption For Bowness On Windermere, The Ferry Boat 1896

The Bowness Ferry across the narrowest part of the lake was originally a hand-rowed opera- tion.

Caption For Trumpington, Anstey Way C1960

At first glance, this row of modern shops, named after the local Anstey Hall, has not changed since 1960; but closer inspection reveals new tenants in the shops, larger trees and flower beds, and more

Caption For Runcorn, Swing Bridge And Canal 1900

Some ferries were nothing more than rowing boats, while a few could carry one horse-drawn vehicle.

Caption For Gwytherin, Post Office C1955

This sleepy row of terraced cottages has, in fact altered very little, although there is no longer a post office here.

Caption For East Runton, Looking East 1933

A row of white beach huts trims the foot of the cliffs like a cuff.

Caption For Aberfan, Aberfan Road C1965

This valley community became the focus of a nation's grief when in 1966 Pontglas School and a row of adjacent houses were buried under a sliding coal tip.

Caption For Lulworth, The Steamship 1925

In days gone by, steamers from the resorts of Swanage, Weymouth and Bournemouth would call in at Lulworth Cove, landing passengers either by a plank bridge - as seen here - or by rowing boat, depending

Caption For Bedford, The River Ouse C1955

The riverside willows on the north bank have only recently been pollarded in this view, in which an eight rows past.

Caption For Low Row, General View C1960

We are looking east down the broad, U-shaped valley of Swaledale from the oddly-named village of Low Row.