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
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Photos
123 photos found. Showing results 161 to 123.
Maps
13 maps found.
Books
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Memories
1,367 memories found. Showing results 81 to 90.
Growing Up
I was born in the former Mechanics Institute in Derwent Street, Blackhill in 1946 where my grandfather was the caretaker. My name was Ann Wall and my grandparents' name was Redshaw. My mother lived with my grandparents in the ...Read more
A memory of Blackhill in 1946 by
My Grandparents
My grandparents lived at Fern Cottage. They moved there before the war and had two children, Dick and Jean. Dick was based at Wick and died in the war. Jean, my mum, married and had me and my sister. I have wonderful ...Read more
A memory of Cropwell Bishop in 1960 by
Trebanog
My grandparents, Henry and Ida Gladys Ward, came to Trebanog with their two daughters during the recession in the late 1920s to work in the mines. He had a brother, William, who worked as a butcher in Porth. I was hoping if someone remembers the time they spent there. Regards M Denney
A memory of Trebanog in 1920 by
Waiting To Go To Bahrain 1966
This is me, pushing my daughter Allison, with my mother Phyllis Carey. I was staying with my parents prior to joining my husband at RAF Muharraq, Bahrain in the summer of 1966. Recessed next to Hoskins the Butchers ...Read more
A memory of Bridport in 1966 by
West Street Shops
Shops on West Street in the 1960s were left to right: Merritts the butcher next door to Blackiston the butcher, famous for the specialty sausages, also had its own slaughterhouse and in the back garden an Anderson shelter used ...Read more
A memory of Midhurst in 1960 by
Researching Ancestors
On Sunday 21st Feb 2010 my mother, family and I visited Hinton Charterhouse to look for information on the Wiltshire family who lived in the High Street. We found the bow window house that was a butchers shop and ...Read more
A memory of Hinton Charterhouse in 2010 by
Hove Town Hall Fire
I think it was 1964 that the Town Hall burnt down. I remember it well. I was about 11 at the time. I do remember that at the back of the TH, was the Police Station. My brother and I got in some "trouble" and the two of us ...Read more
A memory of Hove in 1964 by
Personal Memories Of A Child
I was born in 1942 and by the time I was five years old I has a brother and two sisters. My mum and dad used to send me up to Longriggend for weekends and holidays, probably because my mum was so busy with the ...Read more
A memory of Longriggend in 1940 by
Harworth 'old' Village
The large Horse Chestnut tree to the right was very popular when conkers were in season with boys searching the ground and throwing whatever came to hand at the tree to try and dislodge the nuts that were temptingly out of ...Read more
A memory of Harworth in 1964 by
Childhood Days
As I have lived all my life in Childer Thornton I have so many memories. I would just like to record some from my childhood. The village was a wonderful place to grow up in. There was no traffic to disturb our street play ...Read more
A memory of Childer Thornton in 1950 by
Captions
311 captions found. Showing results 193 to 216.
Cook's the butchers (right) were 'noted for sausages and pork pies', according to their fascia.
The van (right) belongs to Banyard's the butcher's, whose shop was in nearby Church Street. The buildings remain much the same, but all the businesses have changed today.
The thatched house (left) is still Basham's, butchers since 1926.
Hudson's Cycles are on the corner, next door to a butcher's. Opposite is the fine limestone building known as Old Constables.
Next but one is Stead and Simpson's shoe shop and Dewhurst the butchers, then Cleale's garage with its Ford and AA signs.
The advertising hoarding on the pier promoted H Webber, a butcher.
Members of the Jewish community who had sought refuge in the castle either died in the flames when it was set alight or were butchered as they attempted to escape.
It was once busy with butchers' cries.
The single-storey extension on the nearest house has been demolished, but there is something similar on the adjacent house.
The buildings in the distance, including National Stores and Jarvis, the butchers, have been demolished. The grand building was the Corn Exchange of 1889.
On the right is the butcher's shop. In the distance, above the car, is the high-class draper's and grocer's shop of Aldrich and Bryant.
Beyond is the Shoulder of Mutton, whose landlord Frederick Godday was also a butcher. The white gabled building (centre left) has been the post office since the 1940s.
The next building down had been Goymour's the butchers until 1950. Beyond the splash is the timbered Bell Inn, and above it is Stay Barn.
A fine picture taken around 1905 shows that the added part had been a butcher's shop (and a public house called the Dial) run by the Crawley family.
International Stores became a butcher's shop in the 1970s, and by 1983 the site was Savory & Moore, the chemists. It is now a Savers shop.
Of the shops visible here, none is still in retail use except what was Walton's pork butcher's on the Market Place corner (right). Centre left is Castle Walk.
The building is part of the Wharncliffe Estate and prior uses include a Farm, Abattoir, Butchery and Farm Office. The Butchers Block is still in the cellar under the shop floor.
The shop next door with the two gables and jettied front was C J Newell's butcher's shop.
Behind the mini-van on the left, the Butchers Arms had replaced a much older half- timbered building damaged extensively by fire in 1939.
In the background is Holy Trinity Church, a most unusual building, which in the 1900s included a tobacconist, a bank, and two butchers' shops as component parts.
To the right is Duffy, the butcher's. Whitstable suffered badly in the tidal surge of February 1953, when water poured over the sea wall and flooded the town.
The old terrace of shops to the left include J N Read & Son, butchers.
Opposite, in a view eastwards towards Dorchester, is a bullish advertisement for W W Hoskins and Son, high class butchers: `We buy and sell only the best`.
and telegraph poles the other side of this section of the A2 from Rainham to Gillingham, where Mrs Hall had her hairdresser's shop, E H Chatfield was the confectioner and Len Button the butcher
Places (2)
Photos (123)
Memories (1367)
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Maps (13)