Places
26 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Town End, Derbyshire
- Town End, Buckinghamshire
- Town's End, Somerset
- Towns End, Dorset
- Town End, Merseyside
- Town End, Cambridgeshire
- Town's End, Buckinghamshire
- West End Town, Northumberland
- Bolton Town End, Lancashire
- Kearby Town End, Yorkshire
- Town End, Cumbria (near Grange-Over-Sands)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Bowness-On-Windermere)
- Town End, Yorkshire (near Huddersfield)
- Town End, Yorkshire (near Wilberfoss)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Appleby-in-Westmorland)
- Town's End, Dorset (near Melbury Osmond)
- Town's End, Dorset (near Swanage)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Ambleside)
- Town's End, Dorset (near Bere Regis)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Ambleside)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Lakeside)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Kirkby Lonsdale)
- West-end Town, South Glamorgan
- Townend, Derbyshire
- Townend, Strathclyde (near Dumbarton)
- Townend, Staffordshire (near Stone)
Photos
27 photos found. Showing results 1,801 to 27.
Maps
195 maps found.
Books
158 books found. Showing results 2,161 to 2,184.
Memories
3,712 memories found. Showing results 901 to 910.
Hummed To Sleep By A Factory
We used to live on what was called The Avenues on the Rylands estate. This was situated behind the Princess shopping parade, so called after the name of the local flea pit where all the kids went to Saturday morning ...Read more
A memory of Dagenham in 1961 by
I Was One Years Of Age In 1965
Good static shot, black & white (b&w), no doubt Ilford film, the best b&w in the world. I was 1 years of age having been born in 1964 about two or three roads away from where this shot was taken, it's ...Read more
A memory of Ilford in 1965
Beach
I was born in Torquay in June 1954 in Shrublands Hospital (can anybody remember that hospital, it was in the Warberrys). I left Torquay when I was 23 and came to live in London, my heart is still there. Who knows, I might retire back there. ...Read more
A memory of Torquay in 1860 by
Wartime Defences
The photo caption for this in the book states that there were girders and wires and mines on Lyme beach during the war. My father Gilbert Atterbury was Town Clerk from the mid thirties until the late fifties and fought the War ...Read more
A memory of Lyme Regis in 1940 by
Woolwich, Powis Street C1965
This shows Powis Street in Woolwich. The large building in the middle of the photo is the RACS Co-op building, it is also the site in the distance of the first McDonalds shop in England. I was born in Balham in the late ...Read more
A memory of Woolwich
My Home Away From Home
I arrived in Totnes January 1944 and lived up at Dartington until a day before the invasion at Normandy. Totnes became our "hometown." I returned for the fiftieth anniversary and honored for being the first American to come ...Read more
A memory of Totnes in 1944 by
Camping Holiday
As a young teenager with fond memories of Evesham and surrounding areas, I enjoyed with two of my male friends, camping at Weir Camping Meadow, which was located by the River Avon down in the lower part of the town. The camping ...Read more
A memory of Evesham in 1940 by
So Long Ago, But Never Forgetten
I used to live in Eversham Road and to catch the trolley bus on the corner of Birchinton Avenue and Bolckow road was an every day event. I was just 10 years old when this picture was taken, the car probably ...Read more
A memory of Grangetown in 1955 by
Weston Point I.C.I Recreation Club And Runcorn Town
Memory, Saturday Night Old Time dance upstairs in theI.C.I Club. My father played there on the drums. I was there with a girlfriend and her mother and father and grandmother, the old lady taught me ...Read more
A memory of Runcorn in 1957 by
I Miss Shifnal And Have Very Happy Fond Memories.
I have just gone onto this site. I remember the Goliahs. It was when I was a little girl, Mr Goliah used to regularly visit my dad and I think at one stage he dropped off a load of cattle manure with ...Read more
A memory of Shifnal by
Captions
5,112 captions found. Showing results 2,161 to 2,184.
A century after his visit, the town had been transformed from a quiet village to a vibrant centre for the textile industry.
The Market Hall, built of red sandstone, dates from the mid 1600s and stands on the site of an earlier hall.
Its accessibility from the towns and cities of the Midlands has made Bourton a favourite day out.
Instow grew as a resort town at the mouth of the Torridge in the 1830s, and most of the terraces and villas on the shore in this picture date from then.
Besides being a market centre and wool town, Fairford was on an important coaching route in the days of horse-drawn travel, as it straddled the road from London to the south-west.
This photograph was taken outside the Town Hall, looking towards St James's parish church.
The town has recovered its air of prosperity after the hardships and shortages of the war years, and its growing affluence is demonstrated by the number of cars parked beside the pavements.
Not so in 1633, when there were only three licensed sellers in the whole town: grocers Philip Sherwin (who later became mayor) and Thomas Hunt, and the apothecary John Stubbs.
Henry Wormwell, a mill and general furnishing engineer, had premises on the corner of Piccadilly, the block of shops just opposite the Town Hall.
At Hickling, where the Broadland waters fan into expansive shallows, there is a pleasing jumble of red tiled and thatched buildings clustering around the old Pleasure Boat Inn.
The River Fowey is one of Cornwall's longest rivers, rising 900 feet above sea level on Bodmin Moor and passing through the ancient Stannary Town of Lostwithiel on its way to the sea.
This was a rural tree-lined road where children could feel at ease and little danger threatened to befall the solitary cyclist.
This admirable market town, with its Queen Anne and Georgian buildings, was once hailed as 'the Montpellier of England'.
This picturesque flint village was once the most significant of the Glaven estuary ports, and its old Custom House bears testimony to its prestigious past.
The most famous Shambles is in York but many towns had their shambles or meat market at one time.
Everyone is posing for the camera right through the town centre, and in the road too.
It was here and on the Market Place that local people met to protest about unemployment and hardship in the years following the defeat of Napoleon.
The Godolphins built the Angel as their town house in the 17th century, and it became a hotel in the mid 18th century.
This is an altogether more busy scene ), and newly emancipated women boldly walk in all directions.
As Reading expanded south, St Giles', decaying and small, proved unable to cope, and Christchurch was built in 1861-2.
By the 18th century, Ormskirk was already an important agricultural and market town, but with the arrival of the railway in 1849 it rapidly developed as an attractive residential area for Liverpool's prosperous
When Brunel built his Great Western Railway in the 1840s, Didcot became a major junction for the lines to Bristol and Oxford.
Well-mannered town centre buildings open onto the flower-bedecked triangle, but the portents of a more gaudy future are already apparent.
Settle lies on the road between Skipton and Ingleton.
Places (26)
Photos (27)
Memories (3712)
Books (158)
Maps (195)