Places

1 places found.

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Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Maps

42 maps found.

1903-1904, Bland Hill Ref. RNC643792
1947, Bland Hill Ref. NPO643792
1925, Bland Hill Ref. POP643792
1898, Bland Hill Ref. RNE643792
1907, Bland Hill Ref. HOSM55432
1910-1912, Blandy Ref. RNC643803
1946, The Brand Ref. NPO846304
1921, The Brand Ref. POP846304
1945, Brands Hill Ref. NPO648752
1947, Byland Abbey Ref. NPO658178
1946, Brand End Ref. NPO648675
1947, Old Byland Ref. NPO796278
1898, Brand End Ref. RNE648675
1902-1903, The Brand Ref. RNC846304
1901-1902, Brand End Ref. RNC648675
1899, The Brand Ref. RNE846304
1922, Brand End Ref. POP648675
1920, Brands Hill Ref. POP648752
1919, Brand Green Ref. POP648677
1898, Brand Green Ref. RNE648678

Books

Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.

Memories

63 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.

'down Yer 'wey'.

Moved to Farncombe in 1942 from Datchet, but evacuated originally from Barking, London. I remember arriving at my new home at 1 Tudor Circle. My Step-father was a fireman in the AFS, who's ...Read more

A memory of Godalming in 1942 by Arthur Bird

A Long Long Time Ago

We were a dyed in the wool London family, some time before World War 11, 1939, we moved from Earlsmead Road to Breamar Road off West Green Road and lived there at number 73 untill 1951, when we moved out into the country to ...Read more

A memory of Tottenham in 1951 by Charles Youens

Any One Remember A Dennis Howland

Hi I am just wondering if any one can remember my grandad Dennis Howland ? His dad had a cobblers on what they called the pavement ! He was born in Stanford let hope in 1928 and lived there till the ...Read more

A memory of Stanford-le-Hope by lucy.sayers

Arlesey Bedfordshire

When my dad was demobbed after the war in 1946, we had to move back to London because of his job. We had all our funiture put on a lorry, and the local publican, a Ted Bland, delivered us to a requestioned place over a shop in ...Read more

A memory of Arlesey in 1940 by Michael Smith

Army Training On Salisbury Plain

The military owns more than 150 square miles of Salisbury Plain and great chunks of it are closed to the public. I have seen part of this area and "enjoyed" the isolation of camping in bivouacs with my ...Read more

A memory of Larkhill in 1970 by John Howard Norfolk

Ay, Them Were The Days!

I was born in Manor Drive in 1948, in the white house at the top left of the picture. Each house from bottom left working up and then back down again was the Simmons family, then Coppack, Clewes, Fowler, Emptage, Lyons, ...Read more

A memory of Barnton

Bland Street

I was born at 58 Bland St in my grandparent's house.. parents were George Johnson and Winifred Ravenscroft. Grandparents, James and Jane Ravenscroft. Grandad was a green grocer and had a horse and cart. We migrated to Aus in 1956.

A memory of Hulme in 1952 by Val Griffiths

Blands School

I remember Mr Halpenny and Miss Tanner at Blands School, it didn't seem strange at the time to have some small change as teachers. Miss Tanner had apple trees and she always left a box outside her gate for us to have on the way to schoool or take home.

A memory of Burghfield by Oonagh Lindsay

Brambletye Preparatory School

Memories of Brambletye Boys Preparatory School 1967 – 1971. When I went to Brambletye at the age of nine, in September 1967, it was my fifth school in the last four years. As my parents were routinely ...Read more

A memory of Brambletye House in 1967

Burghfield Common

I was born and bought up in Normoor Road, Three Firs Way, Burghfield. I went to Blands, Garlands and then Willink. My mum, her sister and brother all went to Mrs Blands school on Reading Road in the early 50's. My ...Read more

A memory of Burghfield Common in 1970 by Michele Hawkins

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Captions

45 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.

Caption For Luton, Williamson Street C1965

Carnegie's magnificent public library has already gone, replaced by a bland modern structure that has now also been removed.

Caption For Kippax, Westfield Lane C1965

Bought by the Bland family in 1595, it was greatly extended: its frontage measured 600ft, only slightly less than Wentworth Woodhouse near Elsecar, thereby losing a wager made with the Marquis of Rockingham

Caption For Farnborough, Queensmead Shopping Centre C1965

Farnborough is home to much modern architecture; some might say it was bland and characterless.

Caption For Bath, High Street And Municipal Building 1904

This view, taken from the Abbey's aisle roof, again shows the Guildhall to the right; much of the left hand side has now been rebuilt, including the Christopher Hotel, in 1960s bland and cheap neo-Georgian

Caption For Leominster, Corn Square C1955

Notice the old Town Hall on the right hand side of the photograph – now sadly destroyed and replaced by an extremely bland 1960s building.

Caption For Dunstable, Broad Walk C1965

The fashion for pedestrianisation can seem bland, but styles have improved since these early days.

Caption For Colchester, Cups Hotel And Corn Exchange 1892

The hotel, with its six gables and ponder- ous style, replaced a stuccoed 18th-century building, but it has now gone, to be replaced by the bland misjudgement of 1970s Greytown House.

Caption For Kibworth, Church Road C1955

This view, taken from the north-west angle of St Wistan's churchyard, shows an uncomfortable blend of small scale 18th- and 19th-century cottages with the more angular, bland 20th-century buildings.

Caption For Shifnal, Market Place 1898

Shifnal is thought to have been the model for P G Wodehouse's 'Market Blandings'.

Caption For Harrow, Station Road C1960

The neo-Georgian North Thames Gas Board showroom is a bland intrusion.

Caption For East Ham, High Street C1965

On the left the taller Victorian brick buildings were demolished in the 1970s and replaced by bland flat roofed ones.

Caption For Castleford, Queens Park C1965

Two local landowners, the Earl of Crewe (of Fryston Hall) and John Davison Bland (of Kippax Park) donated the area, which was laid out to offer recreation and splendid views over the township

Caption For Pinner, Bridge Street C1955

drops down towards Pinner Underground Station, under the railway bridge and on towards Harrow-on-the-Hill, there is little to herald the wonderful surprise of turning into the High Street just beyond the bland

Caption For Manchester, St Ann's Square And Church 1886

The church was paid for by Lady Ann Bland, the last of the Mosley family.

Caption For Manchester, St Ann's Square And Church 1886

In 1709 the foundation stone of St Ann's was laid; the church was a gift to the town from Lady Ann Bland.

Caption For Leicester, St Margaret's Church, St Margaret's Way C1955

There are some unattributed monuments, and modest glass, but all is just a fraction too bland.

Caption For Sutton, Cheam Road C1955

Out of sight on the left, behind the old telephone kiosk, was the Cheam Road Cinema of 1911, a stylish and grand building whose frontage block was removed in the 1970s and replaced by a bland blank

Caption For Leominster, Corn Square C1955

Notice the old Town Hall on the right hand side of the photograph – now sadly destroyed and replaced by an extremely bland 1960s building.

Caption For Nottingham, Old Market Square C1950

Some of the buildings on the left were replaced by the ten-storey office block Market Square House of 1967, whose bland glazed facades dominate the left side of the market place.

Caption For Hornsey, The Town Hall C1965

The superb building, enhanced by attention to detail both outside and inside, stands proud behind a somewhat bland grassed forecourt.

Caption For Mardale, Castle Crag 1893

Here the Penrith-born artist Jacob Thompson had often stayed with the Blands while on his painting trips to the area.

Caption For Cosby, Main Street C1965

Instead, little has happened since 1965, except that the spindly trees on the right have matured and The Huntsman pub (previously The New Inn) has been rebuilt in a bland red brick.

Caption For Loughborough, Pinfold Gate C1965

The changes did not, fortunately, lead to a bland uniformity in the way in which the town appeared.

Caption For Aldeburgh, The Fishing Boats C1955

Something really fascinates a crowd of very curious beach-goers - not just a landing of fish.