Places
6 places found.
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Photos
2,394 photos found. Showing results 161 to 180.
Maps
41 maps found.
Books
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Memories
2,822 memories found. Showing results 81 to 90.
Summer Memories Of Picktree Village
In the late 1950’s and as a young boy around 8 or 9 living in the west end of Newcastle, I used to visit my Auntie Bella and Uncle Ted regularly. They lived at Number 3 Picktree Cottages, a short row of picturesque cottages ...Read more
A memory of Picktree by
Hainton
I hope, I think I am the first to write - I lived in Hainton 1951/54. Our dad worked on the farm just up the road (Stockman). I went to the little school in Hainton. Headmistress - Mrs Slingsby. Do not remember her deputy, but Miss Officer ...Read more
A memory of Hainton by
Cream Teas At Landslip Cottage
My Greatgrandmother & Greatgrandfather lived at the Landslip Cottage for many years providing cream teas to visiting locals and tourists alike. My own mother married a Gapper born at the bungalow higher up the cliff. ...Read more
A memory of Rousdon in 1959 by
Evacuated To Croyde Bay In 1940 At 3 Months Old.
During 1940 I was evacuated to Croyde Bay with my family the Fletchers. At that time I had 3 older siblings. While there, another brother was born. We lived in the Carpenters Arms Cottage for about 6 years ...Read more
A memory of Croyde by
Memories Of Sutton Lodge, In Sutton Lane—Just South Of The Great West Road, Heston/Hounslow
Recorded by Nicholas Reid, Canberra, Australia. I was christened in the Anglican church at Heston in 1959, though for obvious reason I don’t have any memories of ...Read more
A memory of Heston by
Happy Days
I came to live in Northwood Hills in 1946, aged 16 months. I attended Pinner Road Primary School and then on to Potter Street where I was a prefect in my final year. I had my tonsils out, aged 6 in the lovely old Cottage Hospital, ...Read more
A memory of Northwood Hills by
Wells House
I was born in Hampstead in 1949 and lived with my parents in Wells House, Well Walk. It was a very happy period in my life. I attended New End Primary school and my Mum worked in New End Hospital My Dad use to take me to Whitestone Pond to ...Read more
A memory of Hampstead by
Peartree Cottage
My late husband's family multi-generational of Clapham and during research discovered the death of Benjamin Blackaby in 1857 at his address: Peartree Cottage, White Square, Clapham, London. My late mother-in-law, his ...Read more
A memory of Clapham by
Walking From Cottage Homes
1965. I grew up in Merthyr Mawr road Cottage Homes for children. The walk to Merthyr Mawr village was always an adventure. We would tickle trout from the estate river and run like mad to avoid the water baillif. The old ...Read more
A memory of Merthyr Mawr by
Lasgarn View
I was fascinated when I saw the new development of Garndiffaith photo. This photo is of Lasgarn View, Varteg, which is just above the Garn. I was born in Primrose Cottage in 1951 with my brother as we were twins. My name was Marilyn ...Read more
A memory of Garndiffaith by
Captions
2,020 captions found. Showing results 193 to 216.
A number of her sought-after country cottage pictures are of buildings in the Witley area.
The doors and windows have been altered on the next pair of cottages, whilst the white Rosemary Cottage and the brick gable end beyond remain unchanged.
Back to the river and downstream of Reading, Sonning Lock itself has been entirely renewed but the cottages remain.
Elmore Cottages still command the High Road opposite the village pond and crossroads but have been extended on the south side where the fence on the flint wall has been removed.
William Wordsworth lived with his sister, Dorothy, at Dove Cottage, just outside the village, from 1799 to 1813. He wrote some of his best known poetry here.
William Wordsworth lived with his sister, Dorothy, at Dove Cottage, just outside the village, from 1799 to 1813.
This beautiful village of brick and tile-hung cottages clusters about its small green. On the extreme left we see cottage walls constructed in the popular Flemish bond.
This cottage was well over three hundred years old when the Frith cameraman took this picture.
Weatherboarded cottages surround the tree-lined green. There is also an elegant Regency parade of shops, the Colonnade, situated at the crossroads.
The first of this row of Victorian cottages has the original name, Fern Cottage, painted on the glass fanlight. An ice-cream tricycle stands outside Row End (centre).
The cottages down Abbey Street to the left of the memorial have gone, and the United Counties Bus Company now have a garage there.
This much-photographed cottage stands alongside the beck, in which trout can still be seen. In the village are Lady Lumley's Almshouses.
Beside the quiet mill-pond at Flatford Mill stands Willy Lott's Cottage, instantly recognisable as the setting for Constable's famous painting 'The Hay Wain'.
The waters rise at flood-tide, reaching the sills of the cottage doors, and over the years television news programmes and local newspapers have carried pictures of motor vehicles stranded in the water
A girl leans idly against a wall beside a creeper-covered cottage, a scene that has not greatly changed in the seventy years that have passed since the photograph was taken.
The 18th-century thatched cottage on the left is joined now by more thatched roofs on the cottages beyond the topiary.
Horsmonden's cottages and houses surround a spacious green. The village boasts a wealth of old buildings and timbered cottages.
The fishing hamlet of Worbarrow (upper left), is seen here with Hill Cottage below Gold Down and Sea Cottage boathouses facing Worbarrow Bay.
In an area that once relied on agriculture and fishing, thatched cottages were once a common sight.
The old house with the parapet gable (right) has been divided into three cottages - one is a shop.
Hawkcombe and Whitehall Cottages are there today, but a bridge now replaces the ford where the child and dog are standing.
The village is part of the Holnicote Estate, the gift of the Acland family to the National Trust, to which many of the village's thatched cottages now belong - their preservation is thus assured.
The large house on the left is Brewery House, and behind the post box is Brewery Barn with Brewery Cottages close by.
Highgate's cottage kitchen with its cast iron range and beamed ceiling was the centre of family life.
Places (6)
Photos (2394)
Memories (2822)
Books (0)
Maps (41)