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Memories
86 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Hornby Oo
I used to live at North Lodge, which I believe is now a Barclays Bank. I went to school at St Francis in Crawley, then to Collyers in Horsham, then to Ifield Grammar School. I moved to Canada in 1959, and have been here ever ...Read more
A memory of Three Bridges in 1953 by
15 Years At Barclay House
I remember coming to live at Barclay House in the September with my sister Rachel and my Mum and Dad. We moved from Sutton Coldfield because Dad no longer wanted to work as a garage mechanic for someone else, and he ...Read more
A memory of St Keverne in 1962 by
1960s
I too was born at Denbigh Hospital (1958) and we lived in Trewen which at the time hadn't been extended to Erw Salsbury. I used to walk to school with Mum down Ruthin Road to Fron Goch and we'd call at a sweet shop on the way back on a busy ...Read more
A memory of Denbigh by
1960s Shopping In Uxbridge Road, Hatch End
On the left of this view is the pub sign for the "Railway Hotel" - a popular drinking venue for older members of St Anselm's Youth Club and the Hatch End Young Conservatives! Next door is a garage ...Read more
A memory of Hatch End in 1965 by
1974 Cranford Byron Avenue To Present
I started school at Cranford Infants School 1974, Mr Hill school headmaster. I remember Ms Hickmett, Music Teacher teaching us in one of the huts and running to the school fields up to the river Crane where ...Read more
A memory of Cranford in 1973 by
A Very New Broadway
In 1962 my parents and I (12 years old) moved from Bristol to open Victoria Wine (later to become the Wine Market before reverting back to Victoria Wine). There were still several empty units awaiting occupation. I can recall ...Read more
A memory of Plymstock in 1962 by
A Village To A Town
Born at Orsett hospital in 1950, I remember many things about Stanford. My father was from east London, my mother from rural Essex. They settled at no. 8 Central Road, just round the corner from Barclays bank. Stanford ...Read more
A memory of Stanford-le-Hope in 1972 by
Acton Bridge Cruising Club
My memories of Acton Bridge go back to the mid 1950s and early 1960s. The picture of boats at Acton Bridge Cruising Club takes me back to my teenage days. We had a boat called 'Scampi' which was a 32-foot ...Read more
A memory of Acton Bridge in 1957 by
Axminster Secondary Modern School In The 1950s
I was born in Axminster and having failed my eleven-plus exam (fortunately) I went to the secondary modern school where Mr Tolchard was headmaster (known affectionately as Herby). My favourite ...Read more
A memory of Axminster in 1956 by
Barclays And Taylors Of Tarraby Farm
My mother Gladys Taylor (nee Barclay) and father James Taylor married and lived at Tarraby Farm, Carlisle in 1927. My mother's parents were Alexander and Isabella Barclay, who lived and worked on the the farm. ...Read more
A memory of Carlisle in 1920 by
Captions
136 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
Barclay`s acquired an extra storey.
We are looking down the High Street towards Barclays Bank.
A branch of Barclays Bank lies further down the street on the corner.
The businesses on the left have all gone, but Barclays Bank, the impressive building on the right, and Lloyds Bank farther up the High Street remain in the town - although Lloyds has moved
The first building on the left was Barclays Bank; today it is still Barclays, but it has had a fresh lick of paint.
The Barclays Bank building was designed in an Elizabethan style by William Eden Nesfield in 1874 - at the time it was the Gibson and Son bank.
Directly ahead is the town branch of Barclays Bank.
In this picture, the impressive County Hotel and Barclays Bank (built originally as a wine and spirit warehouse) can be seen on the corner, with the clock tower and the old Infirmary beyond.
On the right of the photograph are various businesses, including Barclays Bank, a tobacconist, a hardware store and a dairy.
The tall building in the centre of the picture is the former Barclays Bank, since demolished.
Barclays Bank's Dutch gable in Market Place gave way to concrete.
The town is changing, and Barclays Bank has replaced the London and Provincial, while Smiths Garage provides petrol from a pump.
On the left is the imposing bulk of William Deacon's Bank; also along here was the Bank of Bolton, which was later taken over by Barclay's.
The town is studded with fine brick and flint houses with steep pantiled roofs - on the right is the flamboyant brick and pebble Barclay's Bank.
Just out of the picture on the left stands Barclay's, once the home of Hugh Rogers, who was the first Squire of Penrose.
Bishop's Waltham is still remembered for having the only privately owned bank in the country, before it was sold to Barclays in the early 1950s.
The town is studded with fine brick and flint houses with steep pantiled roofs—on the right is the flamboyant brick and pebble Barclay's Bank.
We are looking from the Frimley Road up a busy Osnaburgh Parade, with Barclays Bank on the corner.
The premises of Barclays Bank can be seen on the right, next door to Morris Garages.
The building across the square behind the fountain is now Barclays Bank.
Standing in the centre of the town at the junction of roads to Yorkshire and the north is the extravagantly ornate Union Bank Building, occupied by Barclays in the 1950s and now by the
In this picture, the impressive County Hotel and Barclays Bank (built originally as a wine and spirit warehouse) can be seen on the corner, with the clock tower and the old Infirmary beyond.
The buildings on the right of Station Road, which include the Hippodrome, Barclays Bank and the Public Library, have all been demolished.
The timbered buiding on the left, occupied at the time by Barclays Bank, was originally built with plastered upper walls and gabels, later exposed to give the building a mock Tudor flavour.
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