Places
25 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- East Wall, Republic of Ireland
- Pell Wall, Shropshire
- Wall, Northumberland
- Heddon-on-the-Wall, Northumberland
- Wall, Cornwall
- Walls, Shetland Islands
- Wall, Staffordshire
- East Wall, Shropshire
- Wall End, Kent
- Hobbs Wall, Avon
- Wall Bank, Shropshire
- Wall Nook, Durham
- Knowl Wall, Staffordshire
- Hazelton Walls, Fife
- Wall Mead, Avon
- Mid Walls, Shetland Islands
- Greetland Wall Nook, Yorkshire
- Aston le Walls, Northamptonshire
- Wall Heath, West Midlands
- Wall Hill, Greater Manchester
- Wall under Heywood, Shropshire
- Wall End, Cumbria (near Millom)
- Dale of Walls, Shetland Islands
- Bridge of Walls, Shetland Islands
- Hole-in-the Wall, Hereford & Worcester
Photos
515 photos found. Showing results 221 to 240.
Maps
172 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,964 memories found. Showing results 111 to 120.
Buildings.
The buildings featured from left to right - (I do not know the history of the white house), then there are the pillars which are the entrance to the churchyard and mortuary chapel. The church, built in 1865, was used until 1980 for funerals ...Read more
A memory of Woburn by
Family Connections.
My grandfather, William Simpson Bruchshaw, is the man coming out of the greenhouse with the plant in his hand. He was head gardener to Mr Munro Walker until Mr Walker died. My grandfather's youngest brother, Henry, was farm ...Read more
A memory of Pell Wall by
Days Out On Hyde Market
Being born and brought up in Flowery Field, Hyde was the centre of the universe for us as children. After shopping on Hyde market we would turn the corner and enter into the world of this picture. On the right of the picture, in ...Read more
A memory of Hyde in 1960 by
Childhood Memories
I remember well the amazing west road this was a group of houses owned by watney brewery. The road was enclosed by a brick wall at one end and iron gates at the other. No cars allowed. The families mostly only rented two rooms, so ...Read more
A memory of Mortlake in 1950 by
Family Of Ewj Moloney, Lancing Solicitor D 1978
I was part of the St James the Less Players, the Parish church drama group, which started my career on the boards. The Downs,The Manor, The Park, The Clump, The Chalkpit..The Woods The Beach..were all ...Read more
A memory of Lancing by
Beanz Dreamz...
Our family moved to Friars Road in the summer of 66, from a damp house in Boothen Green, which looked over toward the Michelin Factory. I was 5 years old. My father Graham was a former art student at Burslem College of Art under the ...Read more
A memory of Abbey Hulton by
A Long Marriage
This is a photograph of the Regent cinema on the right opposite York House in Twickenham where I met my Wife who was an usherette. It has since been knocked down to make way for a garage. She sold me a very long lasting Choc Ice. We ...Read more
A memory of Twickenham in 1955 by
Little Boy's Heaven
In 1961 or 1962, as a small boy of 5 or 6 my mum, brought me to Hednesford to visit her grandmother, my great-grandmother, Emily Chetwyn. A diminutive lady, we, the children, called her little nana. I believe she lived in the end ...Read more
A memory of Hednesford by
Un Expoded Bomb In The Back Garden!
My family and I have lived at 48 Streatham Common North for the last 30 years. Next door to me at one time lived an elderly spinster who often regaled me with stories. She particularly loved to talk about her Army ...Read more
A memory of Streatham by
Stubbington 1964 67
I landed up in Stubbington after Boxgrove School in Guildford closed ( truly Dickensian!) I was terrified of Arthur Moore, he was just awful, I never had a clue about latin and he really enjoyed the fact that I was a waste of ...Read more
A memory of Stubbington by
Captions
1,668 captions found. Showing results 265 to 288.
The sea wall leads to the Parson and Clerk rocks, with the railway - surely one of the loveliest stretches of line in the country - running alongside.
The civil engineers of the future concentrate on their construction work, while a budding mountaineer attempts a climb of the stone wall (left).
Here inmates of Pegwell's Working Men's Convalescent Home stroll with their families.The home was noted for its sunken garden on reclaimed land, seen on the left below the sea wall.
A nice link with the past is this photograph of the Spa post office complete with stamp machine and wall post box.
Children walk along the road with their mother.
half-timbered gatehouse of the Hospital of St John, founded by Archbishop Lanfranc in 1084 and the second oldest medieval almshouse in England, which stands in Northgate Street, outside the original city walls
Apart from a reinforced sea wall, this view of Marine Parade is little changed today.
The photograph shows a typical shingle beach of large flint pebbles, wooden groyne sea defences and a concrete sea wall.
The white-walled bungalow in the foreground looks a little incongruous in this view of the centre of Hutton, which shows the bridge over the River Leven in the background.
All of the buildings lying downhill from where the mats are drying on the wall were demolished in the 1920s and 1930s.
A substantial stone building of pleasing proportions, with a matching boundary wall, St Mary's Church was built in 1892 and stands on the High Street.
The pond is in central Ewell; the wall separates it from the grounds of Bourne Hall on the right.
On the west bank of the Ant stood Ludham Mill, a tower mill nearly 50ft high to the iron curb, with a base diameter of 12ft 4in, including 18in thick walls.
This is not a beautiful scene, but some effort has been put into designing the brick boundary wall, flagpoles and railings.
Roofs fell in, walls collapsed through the weight of smothering ivy, and congregations declined.
Sidmouth's sea wall was first built in the 1830s, though attempts to create a satisfactory harbour failed.
The cottages are outside the line of the old walls, and may not have been subjected to the ban on thatch which followed the fires of the 17th century.
Considered to be the best medieval hall in the country after Westminster Hall, the Great Hall dates back to the early 13th century and includes fine arcade piers of Purbeck marble.
It is interesting to read the prices advertised beneath the Wall's ice cream 'Stop here and Buy Some' sign outside the café.
The small boy on the left is leaning against the wall which formerly enclosed three acres of grounds belonging to the White Hart Hotel, but now occupied by a nondescript block of shops and offices.
A more modern view of St Ives, with flower boxes gracing the windows of the houses and with smart whitewashed walls.
There is much texture in this detailed composition of one corner of the harbour, made by the slate stones of the breakwater wall, the heavy coiled ropes and the basketwork of the crab pots.
This range of 18th- and 19th-century cottages, some thatched, look across to the parish church, whose churchyard wall can be seen on the left.
Note the dry stone wall in the foreground.
Places (25)
Photos (515)
Memories (1964)
Books (0)
Maps (172)