Maps

9,439 maps found.

1925, Thorpe Underwood Ref. POP847553
1924, Long Marston Ref. POP766543
1924, West Field Ref. POP864144
1946, Grange Ref. NPO718683
1947, Low Gate Ref. NPO768114
1947, Harlow Hill Ref. NPO727411
1897, Royal Oak Ref. RNE821377
1898, Pockthorpe Ref. RNE807812
1895, West Field Ref. RNE864144
1947, West Field Ref. NPO864144
1947, Thorpe Underwood Ref. NPO847553
1898, Dale End Ref. RNE687765
1947, Lodge Green Ref. NPO765795
1898, Long Marston Ref. RNE766543
1898, Green End Ref. RNE720798
1898, Langford Green Ref. RNE752430
1899, Thurlby Ref. RNE848014
1887, Wold Newton Ref. HOSM64918
1903-1908, Church End Ref. RNC668364
1901-1902, Lower Street Ref. RNC769776

Books

39 books found. Showing results 2,449 to 2,472.

Memories

1,548 memories found. Showing results 1,021 to 1,030.

Dances At The Welfare Hall

I remember going to the dances at the Welfare Hall with my friends Dorothy Bridges and Margaret Wood, we all livedf at theMiners houses at 'North' it was called because all the streets began with an A. I loved ...Read more

A memory of Easington Colliery in 1960 by Anne Dexter

My Wonderful Years In Fernham

I was born in Fernham in 1936 in the thatched cottage on the green (now known as Corner Cottage, opposite the church), as was my mother before me. The house was my grandmother's, Mrs Mary Brown. My grandfather Harry ...Read more

A memory of Fernham in 1940 by Terry White

Off To The Smoke

Wes Coulthard and me decided to go to the smoke to try our luck,this was early sixties. Wes had worked in London before for a building company called Higgs & Hill so we decided to give it a go as we had just been laid off. It was ...Read more

A memory of Newburn in 1964 by Jimmy Burrows

St John`s Church

We married at St. John`s Church, 1st September 1956. I went to Connaught girls school from 1949-1953. I lived in Pearcroft Road until I married and then in Rhodesia Road until we moved to just outside Chelmsford, Essex. We now ...Read more

A memory of Leytonstone in 1956 by Maureen Payne Nee Evans

Gilbert Scott My Father And Me 1915 To 1998

My dad was born 1915 and I was born 1947. At the age of seven he went blind so he went to Queen Victoria Blind School in Newcastle till he was 15 years old. When he came out he learned to play the ...Read more

A memory of Washington in 1920 by Gilbert Scott

I Am Seeking Old Images Of Chapel St Leonards In The Early 1950s

My grandfather had a holiday home that was washed away in the 1953 floods, it was a very unsual property from what I have been told, but have never seen an image of it. It ...Read more

A memory of Chapel St Leonards by John Alcock

My Younger Life In Penge

I remember the High Street quite well. This photograph is looking north. Just up past the Police Station there was a cake shop, then a chemist shop (A J Mack), then there was Olby's, then the large shop, Rogers. Next was ...Read more

A memory of Penge by Anthony Godly

Memories Of Barnstaple

 My aunt was the Manager of the Imperial Hotel which once stood on the bank of a river (whose name escapes me), in the 1940s. I spent several holidays with her which were great experiences for a young boy from a relatively ...Read more

A memory of Barnstaple in 1953 by Fionn Young

Great Hospital

I was a patient at the Pyford Hospital from about 1959. I was aged four. I had dislocated hips and I was there for nearly a year. My parents could only visit at week-ends as we lived in London. However I enjoyed my time there. It was ...Read more

A memory of Pyrford in 1959 by Lesley O'dea

Childhood Newcastle V Birmingham

I remember going to my grandparents' house in Low Row, Addison. It was a colliery village and it was always a treat to go there in my summer holidays. The house was basically a two up, two down but the downstairs back ...Read more

A memory of Ryton in 1952 by John Wood

Captions

2,676 captions found. Showing results 2,449 to 2,472.

Caption For Dinas Mawddwy, The Village C1955

Dinas Mawddwy is also infamous for the murder of one Lewis Owen, Baron of the Exchequer and Vice Chamberlain of North Wales.

Caption For Knott End On Sea, The Ferry C1960

In the background we can see the tall Pharos lighthouse and the North Euston Hotel, designed in 1840 by the famous architect Sir Decimus Burton.

Caption For Steeple Claydon, North End Road C1955

This view looks south-west along North End Road past the former pub, now a house.

Caption For Bishop Auckland, Escomb, The Saxon Church Of St John The Evangelist 1898

The small 7th-century church of St John the Evangelist is one of the finest examples of early Christian architecture in the North.

Caption For Uppingham, Market Place C1963

However, it looks north to the Falcon Hotel. The coach entrance and yard were soon to be enclosed providing a foyer and lounge - but not yet.

Caption For Gravesend, Clifton Marine Parade C1898

At Gravesend Reach, the River Thames narrows on its way from the North Sea to London Bridge, another twenty-six miles upstream.

Caption For Mill Hill, The Village Pond, The Ridgeway C1965

This lovely village extends from Highwood Hill to the north to Mill Hill East underground station in the south.

Caption For Syston, Melton Road C1955

Syston, a Domesday village situated about four miles north of Leicester, was industrialised by an influx of framework knitters in the 19th century, which generated standardised red brick buildings

Caption For Caldecott, High Street C1955

To the north of the village are earthworks, all that remains of the lost hamlet of Snelston.

Caption For Gravesend, Clifton Marine Parade C1898

At Gravesend Reach, the River Thames narrows on its way from the North Sea to London Bridge, another twenty-six miles upstream.

Caption For Edington, The Church 1900

In the north transept the east window, a depiction of the crucifixion, was restored in 1970.

Caption For Whitby, The Harbour 1885

This view is taken looking north across the harbour. High on the hill are the abbey ruins and over to the left, the lovely Norman church of St Mary.

Caption For Manchester, View From Victoria Hotel 1889

Over on the left is Manchester Exchange station, opened by the London & North Western Railway in 1884 and famous for the long platform which linked it to Victoria Station.

Caption For Whalley, Broad Lane 1906

This means that double-decker buses and coaches cannot head north out of Whalley towards Mitton.

Caption For Penrith, The Castle 1893

In 1893 Penrith Castle was owned by the London and North Western Railway Company which had stables for their horses inside the ruins.

Caption For Clifton Hampden, The Plough Inn C1960

On the north side of the road is the Plough Inn, occupying another of the 16th- and 17th-century village houses, in this case with late medieval cruck frames within.

Caption For Caldecott, High Street C1955

To the north of the village are earthworks, all that remains of the lost hamlet of Snelston.

Caption For Rothley, Woodgate C1965

Rothley lies some five miles to the north of Leicester, and to the west of the busy A6.

Caption For Swindon, Regent Street 1948

The View North-West This thoroughfare was originally lined with workers' cottages, but from about 1865 many of these dwellings were converted into shops.

Caption For Bude, Canal And Harbour 1890

Opened in 1823, the Bude Canal served a large area of north Cornwall. The canal itself extended some 35 miles inland, though by the time this picture was taken much of it had already closed.

Caption For Whitby, The Harbour 1885

This view is taken looking north across the harbour. High on the hill are the abbey ruins and over to the left, the lovely Norman church of St Mary.

Caption For Nottingham, Trent Bridge 1902

The River Trent is navigable for some 93 miles, and plays a vital role in linking the waterways of the North East with those of the Midlands.

Caption For Piddinghoe, The Village C1955

We are in the Ouse valley just north of Newhaven. St John's church is on high ground overlooking the tidal river. It has a Norman flint-built round tower, and a shingled octagonal spire.

Caption For Runcorn, Runcorn Bridge And The Transporter Bridge C1961

Sunday and holiday traffic heading to and from North Wales could take up to two hours to cross.