Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Pentre-cwrt, Dyfed
- Pentre Halkyn, Clwyd
- Pentre, Mid Glamorgan
- Ton Pentre, Mid Glamorgan
- Pentre, Powys (near Llangynog)
- Pentre, Powys (near Guilsfield)
- Pentre, Powys (near Bishop's Castle)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Mold)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Ruabon)
- Pentre, Shropshire (near Chirk)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Hawarden)
- Pentre, Dyfed (near Pontyates)
- Pentre, Powys (near Newtown)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Chirk)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Ruthin)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Mold)
- Pentre, Shropshire (near Oswestry)
- Pentre, Powys (near Welshpool)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Mold)
- Pentre, Shropshire (near Forton)
- Burntwood Pentre, Clwyd
- Pentre Berw, Gwynedd
- Pentre Hodre, Shropshire
- Pentre Llanrhaeadr, Clwyd
- Pentre-celyn, Clwyd
- Pentre Broughton, Clwyd
- Pentre Gwynfryn, Gwynedd
- Pentre Maelor, Clwyd
- Pentre-clawdd, Shropshire
- Pentre Galar, Dyfed
- Pentre Llifior, Powys
- Pentre-cefn, Shropshire
- Pentre-Gwenlais, Dyfed
- Pentre-Poeth, Dyfed
- Pentre Cilgwyn, Clwyd
- Pentre Morgan, Dyfed
Photos
98 photos found. Showing results 2,161 to 98.
Maps
316 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 2,593 to 2.
Memories
1,250 memories found. Showing results 1,081 to 1,090.
Tales Of Brandon Hill
Queen Elizabeth I granted housewives the right to dry their washing on Bristol's Brandon Hill. Bristol's most prominent land mark, the Cabot Tower, was 100 years old in 1998. But the official opening was marked by a ...Read more
A memory of Bristol by
Bristol's Lost Streets
A list of just some streets which have disappeared or changed their names since 1900. Barr's Street (Lane until 1848) - Milk Street to St James's Barton - demolished and built over post-war for Broadmead Shopping ...Read more
A memory of Bristol by
My Parents' Cottage
My parents owned the centre of the cottages in this photograph for a number of years. Some of the happiest summers were spent on Mill Bay and playing on the green by Cowrie Cottage...
A memory of East Portlemouth by
Rock Park Swimming Pool
I attended the North Devon Technical School in the late 50's having passed the 13+ from Barnstaple Secondary Modern ( I've yet to meet anyone that took the 13+ in recent years) I must have been about 14 -15 when the school ...Read more
A memory of Barnstaple in 1958 by
Jasmine Cottage, Petworth Road
In 1956, my family moved into Jasmine Cottage which stands behind the wall on the left of this picture. It was (is) the centre cottage of 3 in one old building. There was a family that lived in the house on the right, ...Read more
A memory of Witley in 1954 by
Platts Farm
I remember Platts Farm. My gran lived in a bungalow (a wooden hut really) right at the far end of the field. There was a small pond and a little stream running through it. We went there every shcool holidays and I stayed there all ...Read more
A memory of Pickmere in 1960 by
My Childhood Garden Part Iii
When we first moved into The Croft, as the house was called, access to the front door was gained by walking up a narrow slopping path up and along the grassy bank towards the wooden gate. The property along with ...Read more
A memory of Shamley Green by
My Port Talbot Days
I lived in Port Talbot between 1956 and 1968. I regard it as my second home. I finished school in 1958, at Velindre Secondary Modern School. I had many jobs in Port Talbot, window cleaning, working at Corona soft drinks, the ...Read more
A memory of Port Talbot in 1956 by
Oxshott
My memores relate to 1950 (year of my birth) onwards. My maiden name was Lockett. I was born at The Pines, Sheath lane in 1950 (delivered by John Lytle) and about 2-3 years later my father built 'Whitethorns' on Goldrings Road. It was a ...Read more
A memory of Oxshott in 1950 by
Grandad's Cement Works
Mr grandfather owned the old cement works in Quay Lane (this picture shows the large building with the tall chimney, centre of frame) and his men used to make concrete roofing tiles there. In the late 1950's the chimney became ...Read more
A memory of Brading in 1958 by
Captions
3,594 captions found. Showing results 2,593 to 2,616.
In the centre of the picture is a Humber keel, sporting the traditional rig of a single square lug sail.
Many of the sturdy, timber-framed cottages in the centre of this lovely village have been reinforced and decorated with brickwork during the 18th century.
This road junction is just to the south of the centre of Wellington, and sits astride the London to Holyhead road that was built by Thomas Telford in the early 1800s.
The white building in the centre is the office of Barber & Son, a local estate agents founded in 1848.
The institute, which offered a range of evening classes for workers, and was famed for its penny lectures, was one of the earlier projects linked with a major redevelopment of the town centre
The 35ft statue of Queen Victoria, designed by the architect J S Gibson and the sculptor H C Fehr, dominated the centre of the new city square following its unveiling by the Prince of Wales on 12 May
Just beyond the old Swan Hotel, centre left, is the entrance to Boroughbridge Hall.
proportion of medieval and Tudor timber-framed houses; it is even more astonishing that the market infill between Middle Row and the High Street survived traffic imperatives.This view looks west to the town centre
St Michael's stands on the east side of Melton Road in the centre of the village.
Today this area is pedestrianised, and the whole of Chorley centre seems to be a one-way system.
The small boatyard on the right is surrounded with corrugated iron-clad buildings, whilst the stone building in the centre proclaims tea gardens on a gable sign, ready for business on this early spring
It is still an important shopping centre.
St Michael's stands on the east side of Melton Road in the centre of the village.
To the centre left is Squirrell's seed and corn merchants, now a housing development.
Delamere, originally called 'foresta de la mare', is a very scattered community with no real village centre.
The tower of St Luke's Church rises just beyond (centre) – local legend states that a yew tree in the churchyard was used to make archers' bows in the Hundred Years War.
A commemorative plaque, visible on the ivy-clad gable end (centre left), has survived.
Centre left stands the Bear Hotel, a lovely old coaching inn dating back to 1432.
In the distance is a corn-grinding post mill (centre left), possibly owned at this time by a Mr Mallett, whose worry was that the building of houses nearby would keep the wind from the mill's sails
The tower of Holy Trinity church is just visible above two fields in the centre of town, and terraced houses along Bodmin Road and the Workhouse can be seen towards the left of the picture
Now it has been adapted by Oakham School as the Art and Design Centre.
There is a glimpse of the Great House - visited by the earl of Chatham with 15-year-old William Pitt the Younger - before Star Supply Stores and the Royal Lion Hotel (centre).
The higher part of Kilburn village, including the parish church of St Mary (which we can see in the background, centre) clusters around its large village green.
An unusual sculpture of its 16th-century priest, Macobus Kasey, still attracts many visitors to this busy village which has three pubs, a butcher, a baker, a school and a health centre.
Places (57)
Photos (98)
Memories (1250)
Books (2)
Maps (316)