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
Places
35 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Wood End, Berkshire
- Wood End, Hertfordshire
- Woods End, Greater Manchester
- Woodend, Essex
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Keswick)
- Woodend, Cheshire (near New Mills)
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Egremont)
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Boot)
- Wood End, West Midlands (near Coventry)
- Wood End, Greater Manchester (near Chadderton)
- Wood End, West Midlands (near Wednesfield)
- Wood End, Hereford & Worcester
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Nuneaton)
- Wood End, Buckinghamshire (near Mursley)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Kempston)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Bedford)
- Wood End, Greater Manchester (near Mossley)
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Tamworth)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Kimbolton)
- Wood End, Buckinghamshire (near Mursley)
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Redditch)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Ampthill)
- Woodend, Staffordshire
- Woodend, Fife (near Lochgelly)
- Woodend, Lothian (near Queensferry)
- Woodend, Northamptonshire
- Woodend Green, Essex
- Wood End Green, Greater London
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Arlecdon)
- Woodend, Nottinghamshire (near Sutton In Ashfield)
- Lower Woodend, Buckinghamshire
- Upper Woodend, Grampian
- Shenstone Woodend, Staffordshire
- Lower Woodend, Grampian
- Hanbury Woodend, Staffordshire
Photos
6 photos found. Showing results 141 to 6.
Maps
150 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 169 to 4.
Memories
2,335 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.
Laleham Abbey
My sister Kathleen Taylor (former name) was cook in the kitchen for the retired old ladies. I was always staying with her during school holidays. Her husband then (now deceased) was Barry Taylor and they had two children, Sarah born ...Read more
A memory of Laleham in 1970 by
Boyhood Memories From 1952
It was around this time that the tram lines were taken up from Sunderland Road in Gateshead. The men stored the old lines in Somerset Street and Devonshire Street. As boys we would dig up the tar from around the streets ...Read more
A memory of Gateshead in 1952 by
The Smallfield Brickyard
I was born at 1 Kings Cottages in April 1931. I have two brothers, and as young boys we were close friends of the late Gerald Mitchel. Gerald's mum, nee Doris King, lived with her husband (Syd, who served with the RAF) in ...Read more
A memory of Smallfield in 1930 by
My Grand Parents
My grandparents lived in Hearts of Oak Cottages and we used to go and see them on Sundays with my dad and brothers while my mam made dinner. We would walk down the old line. My dad took us to the engine room at the colliery to ...Read more
A memory of Nantyffyllon in 1957 by
Malvern Wells
Does anyone remember the army transit camp in Malvern Wells called Wood Farm Camp? I looked on Google Earth and all that is there is a field, I had some great memories of this place when I was a kid.
A memory of Malvern Wells in 1967 by
Happy Times In Maldon
My family and I moved from London in 1955 to Maldon, following a visit the year before with our Sunday School outing, and we moved near to the Prom. We had such happy times living there and as children my friends and I used to ...Read more
A memory of Maldon in 1955 by
Holidays In Laugharne
I and my family stayed at the Ferry House, next to the Boat House from 1965 to 1973. The house was then owned by the wife of my dad's boss and we used to be able to go for a fortnight each summer. We used to park our car, with ...Read more
A memory of Laugharne in 1965 by
Evacuation
I was 6 years old in 1941 and a native of Glasgow. During the worst of the German bombing at that time, my mother, brother and I moved to Auchnahyle Farm, which was farmed by my father's uncle and aunts, Bob, Mag and Jess Jamieson. My ...Read more
A memory of Pitlochry in 1941 by
Those Lovely Days
These days Greylake's claim to fame is the council tip where people get rid of their rubbish, but when I was a little girl it was one of the greatest places in the world to me. If you go a couple of fields past the tip and look ...Read more
A memory of Greylake in 1955 by
Growing Up In Greenford In The 1960s And 1970s
Here are some random memories: Lists Bakeries on Greenford Broadway. Lovely aroma, tasty bread. The paper bags all used to have the slogan 'Good Flavour Always Finds Favour'. The covered market near ...Read more
A memory of Greenford by
Captions
583 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.
Above the second shop on the left, the wood is brown and its walls are cream; the second bay window has been removed. The fifth shop along is Boots, which now occupies three of the shop fronts.
The paving blocks between the tracks were made from white wood, balastic lava or jarrah. The running of connecting trams between Lytham and Blackpool began in 1905.
Bridge Street leads on to Wood Street, where there is a fountain and a clock tower presented to the town in 1888 by an American visitor.
From Boarsbarrow Hill, this view looks to St Mary Magdalene Parish Church and Georgian Loders Court, which is the home of Viscount and Viscountess Hood (centre). The woods of Waddon rise behind.
The narrow bridge stands at the confluence of the Rivers Rother and Arun, and replaces a former Anglo-Saxon structure built of wood. A
The Dawlish Water and its high tributary the Smallacombe Brook rise on the wooded heathland of Little Haldon Hill, which rises eight hundred feet at the back of the town.
The downs to the west of the Arun are notably more wooded than those to the east, which are remarkably open and treeless.
Bobbin manufacture for the wool and cotton mills of the north of England was once an important industry in the well-wooded Lake District.
Bobbin manufacture for the wool and cotton mills of the north of England was once an important industry in the well-wooded Lake District.
All about are rocky fields and wooded slopes, pitted with gigantic granite boulders. The cottages in the winding street are solidly built of local granite.
Before Bullenshaw House was built, the area was wooded and provided a natural playground for youngsters. During the war two air-raid shelters were built into the hill.
The architect John Wood the Elder planned the Parades as part of an area based on the architecture of ancient Rome.
With playing fields, a recreation area, a lake and woodlands, it is very popular with the local townspeople. There are fine views over the town and to the wooded slopes beyond.
Once surrounded by the deer-haunted woods and heaths of Cranborne Chase, Alderholt has kept much of its original character, despite some new houses and a church of little antiquity; the latter is a building
Here we see the roofs of Clifton from the pleasantly wooded Downs.
The central doors, which can just be seen in this photograph, were made by the famous wood carver, Thompson of Kilburn: his signature, a mouse, is carved on the right-hand door.
A walk through the countryside around Uplyme often takes you as much into Dorset as Devon, for the county border weaves around the ridges, woods and tiny brooks of the locality.
Queen Victoria much admired the town of Dartmouth and its beautiful estuary, recording in her journal that '...the place is lovely, with its wooded rocks and church and castle at the entrance.
Middleton – its full name is Middleton- by-Wirksworth – was a quarrying and mining village which produced the famous Hopton Wood stone.
Taken from Billy Banks Wood south of the Swale, this distant view shows the defensive site of Richmond Castle, and the town clinging precariously - and picturesquely - to the hillside
Its Anglo-Saxon name means 'wooded hill in the territory of Billa's people'.
The barn and outbuilding seen here were demolished in the 1940s as part of the long-overdue restoration programme.
Paddock Wood is today a surprisingly modern industrial town. At the centre of the hop- picking area, it was once a great hop centre with many oast houses.
Warwickshire`s vernacular architecture characteristically uses a mixture of building materials; with stone in the Cotswolds, for instance, and an abundance of timber in the formerly well
Places (35)
Photos (6)
Memories (2335)
Books (4)
Maps (150)

