Places
6 places found.
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Photos
9 photos found. Showing results 1 to 9.
Maps
83 maps found.
Books
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Memories
1,642 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Bush House Open Air School
I also attended bush house open air school not sure how many years maybe one or two think I left around 1959 - 1961. I think my teacher was Miss Williams - I remember all the teachers names you have mentioned but only ...Read more
A memory of Isleworth by
London,Piccadilly Circus 1951 1955
I was a young Constable in the year 1951, and fresh from Peel House, Westminster was assigned tio the Savile Row station known as CD. I lived at the Section House on Broadwick Street, Soho named after Lord Trenchard. ...Read more
A memory of London in 1951 by
Family Connections.
My father Mr Jim Rush is at the far right of this photo in a light shirt, looking rather windswept. At this time he was the proprietor of the Pavilion Hotel and also for a short time the owner of the Alexander Hall which he ran as a dance hall.
A memory of Cowes in 1955 by
Notes From The Frith Files.
This photograph shows residents waiting for the No.144 Midland Red bus from Malvern to Worcester outside the village shops. Far left is EW Bird's butchers, left is Cromptons newsagents, off picture further left is Procters ...Read more
A memory of Powick
Happy Times
During the last war my father served in the Merchant Navy and saw Aberdaron from the sea, that was to be the beginning of many trips and a life-long love of the village. I started going to Aberdaron at about the age of six and have been ...Read more
A memory of Aberdaron by
Moat Mount Youth Fc.
Not long after the completion of Worcester Crescent and Bedford Road, the construction of Ramillies Road I had acquired a large number of new friends, all boys. My parents had moved from Woodford Essex to 52 Worcester Crescent ...Read more
A memory of Mill Hill by
Memories Of Market Drayton
This once sleepy hamlet was first home to me, a better place for childhood there could not be. Little Drayton church and it`s `olde` Sunday school. fishing excursions with Uncle to Buntingsdale pool, Dalelands West; ...Read more
A memory of Market Drayton by
My Great Grandfather Mother And Father's Link
My parents often told me this story. My Great Grandfather was John Roberts. His son, my father, Thomas Glyndwr Roberts and my mother Myra Roberts (Evans) as young children were playing on the swings in ...Read more
A memory of Blaenllechau by
Street Life
Welling in the Fifties had never been short of colourful characters plying their trade in and around the suburban Streets. I can fondly recall three from my childhood, the most memorable being the old rag and bone man who sat perched on his ...Read more
A memory of Welling by
The Fairway
I was born at 28 The Fairway in 1946. There was (is) a wide grassed area down the centre of the road making it a kind of dual carriageway. In the years following the 2nd World War there were, "Pig bins", on several sections of the grass ...Read more
A memory of Northolt by
Captions
436 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
However, the Ordnance Survey maps surveyed shortly after the First World War show that the development had stopped short of this view. These shops were built around 1930.
It is in the shape of a Latin cross, with short transepts and a short chancel ending in an apse.
It is seemingly a hot summer's day in Southsea, yet there is just one child wearing shorts. Today everybody would be wearing T-shirts and shorts and slapping on the suntan lotion.
The stone keep was built in 1170, with the stone curtain walls and improved living quarters being added shortly afterwards.
It changed to white shirts and black shorts and socks in 1909 and in 1911 to the familiar royal blue shirts and white shorts.
Medieval vases, iron keys, Norman stonework and animal bones bring together Old Sarum's troubled and relatively short-lived past.
Just a short walk from the Hydro and you are on Ilkley moor. In the top left of this photograph is the old Semon Convalescent Home.
The rebuilt suspension bridge in 1923 shortly after its opening. Apart from the fashions of the day, this view remains virtually the same today.
This is a short street just off High Street that links it to Arthur Square. The cobbled streets are seen clearly, as are the jaunting cars, carts and a bike.
This shot was taken shortly before the first residents moved in.
A short flight in this light aircraft, even just a few hundred feet up, would give the sightseeing holidaymaker a marvellous view of both the coastline and the Broads inland.
Her time was short' - if 70 years was short, he was sure that this was the place for him.
This view was taken shortly after the Royal Baths opened. They were said to be unequalled in decoration and roominess, and for 5/6d you could get a mud bath with electricity.
Apart from visitors staying in the villages, these beaches attract others from Ventnor, a short stroll away.
Top-hatted gentlemen and crinoline-clad ladies promenade along the specially constructed corridor inside the Pavilion, shortly after its opening in 1871.
Although not identified by the Frith photographer, this scene appears to be taken near Danebridge, a short way upstream from the weir and canal feeder.
Popular with all Bedfordians, the suspension bridge prevents a short stroll becoming a very long one. This shot is taken from the south side of the river with The Embankment in the background.
Roads around Bristol were turnpiked from the 1720s, though many were short stretches and often only seven feet wide.
This is another postern gate surviving from the Town Wall, which was built to defend Richmond against Scottish raids shortly before the Battle of Bannockburn.
They were converted into an hotel, as seen in this view, but shortly afterwards the building was reconverted back to twenty-nine flats.
The short flights enabled drivers to be on the roads of France or Belgium much more quickly than if they used the ferries.
A chain ferry transports cars and passengers over the short crossing across the mouth of Poole Harbour.
The little hamlet of Calenick lies a short distance south of Truro, in a valley bottom on the old road to Falmouth. Here beside the old lane is one of the few thatched cottages.
Within a short walk of the Market Square are two interesting museums.
Places (6)
Photos (9)
Memories (1642)
Books (0)
Maps (83)