Places
18 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Hythe, Kent
- Hythe, Hampshire
- Small Hythe, Kent
- Bablock Hythe, Oxfordshire
- Methwold Hythe, Norfolk
- Hythe, Somerset
- Hythe, Surrey
- Hythe End, Berkshire
- The Hythe, Essex
- Egham Hythe, Surrey
- West Hythe, Kent
- New Hythe, Kent
- Broad Street, Kent (near Hythe)
- Horn Street, Kent (near Hythe)
- Newbarn, Kent (near Hythe)
- Newington, Kent (near Hythe)
- Broad Street, Kent (near Hythe)
- Stone Hill, Kent (near Hythe)
Photos
360 photos found. Showing results 3,361 to 360.
Maps
101 maps found.
Books
10 books found. Showing results 4,033 to 10.
Memories
4,406 memories found. Showing results 1,681 to 1,690.
The Chef's Lackey
My parents and I spent a very enjoyable week at Moreton Paddox when it was run by the WTA. At the finish of our week we went to Wales but, as I was awaiting my School Certificate results, I journeyed back alone to the Paddox ...Read more
A memory of Moreton Paddox in 1948 by
The Back Streets Of N8
In 1940 at age 1, I was moved into 123 Nelson Road with my parents and older brother.It was to be my permanent home for the next 20 years. Nelson road was split into two parts by Weston Park, the scruffy end between ...Read more
A memory of Crouch End in 1940 by
Kilburn Temperance Council Open Air Fête Event
I don't suppose there's anyone alive today who remembers this event but they would have to be about 143 years old! But as a shot in the dark, I wonder if anyone who remembers old Fairs and ...Read more
A memory of Kilburn in 1880 by
Elvaston Cottage Marsh Road Fleggburgh/ Burgh St Margaret
I moved to Fleggburgh in about 1996/97? I moved in with my father who had owned Elvaston Cottage for a few years. The house was a very thick walled place with large fire places and tons of ...Read more
A memory of Fleggburgh in 1997 by
Gunsite Farm
Hi, Thanks for your comments. On my birth certificate my address is 37 Gunsite Farm. We left when I was two in 1964. However, I'm fascinated by its history. My mum was a single parent and had a caravan next door to another sing parent! ...Read more
A memory of Fawley by
Growing Up
I went to a junior fellowship and then senior in St. Peter's rooms by the bowling green. Spent hours watching tennis at the courts in Leigh Rd. Haven't been back for many years, are they still there I wonder. Many happy memories of Hale village.
A memory of Hale by
Wally's Farm
I remember going on my push bike with my 3 brothers and we went to Wally's farm which was by the river cole , we was shouting his name and throwing stones up the windows , and he came out chasing us with a stick , I was so scared . Feel so guilty now poor old man
A memory of Kingshurst by
New School In Southminster
I came to Southminster to join the Staff (there were actually just 2 teachers and a headmistress) at the new infants school in 1963. It was a long warm autumn and my husband and I being newly married lived in a ...Read more
A memory of Southminster in 1963 by
Conkers
I seem to remember that this section of Upton Park had its entrance at Sussex Place (at the East end of the High Street, just past Upton Road) Many an hour was spent walking/running through this section on route to Lacelles playing fields on ...Read more
A memory of Slough by
Happy Times Then And Now
We had a caravan at Talacre in the late 70's until 1982 when I was 5. I have some vague memories of the sand dunes and the site (now Talacre Beach). Myself and my sister and my children come on holiday every year now, staying ...Read more
A memory of Talacre by
Captions
4,899 captions found. Showing results 4,033 to 4,056.
Beeching closed the railway line, and the village has been bypassed by the A541; the modern village website proclaims that 'there are no shops in Nannerch'.
Middle Beach (foreground) at Studland, is overlooked by the 1943-built Fort Henry on Redend Point (right-hand clifftop), which Canadian Engineers named for their home base in Ontario.
A church had been built by the local landowners at nearby Panatasaph, but the family converted to Catholicism. A bitter dispute followed, but the Bishop of St Asaph had to relinquish the church.
Only the clothes worn by the children give a clue to the date of this photograph. The vista has hardly changed in 60 years.
Inspired by the Theodosian Wall at Constantinople, its use at Caernarvon was deliberate and designed to impress.
The defensive capability of the tower parapet was enhanced by the fitting of machicolations, an overhang that allows the defenders to drop missiles on the heads of uninvited guests.
By the south transept is a celtic cross memorial to Thomas Harding of Dunsmore, a protestant martyr burnt in 1532.
Designed in the 1760s by the splendidly-named architect Stiff Leadbetter for William Drake, it replaced a 1630s house and was completed and decorated by Robert Adam.
Hewitts, the Free Church of 1913 and the hall beyond were demolished in 1963 and replaced by the tawdry flat-roofed three-storey Sycamore House flats, offices and shops.
J W Ebbs' electrical shop next door was once an ironmonger's, and was run by the father and grandfather of Sir David Frost.
This is the centre of Milford, with the road to Keyhaven and the coast on the right by the Midland Bank.
By the time the lake silted up in the 1830s, the name Hoylake had replaced Hoose, the original name of the village that nestled in the sand-hills on the fringes of Liverpool Bay.
The opening of the steelworks was followed by the building of a chemical plant at Baglan Bay by British Petroleum.
The buildings we see here were built by the Duke of Newcastle as a private residence in 1679, but were burnt out during the Reform Bill Riots of 1831.
When Windsor was besieged by the Dauphin of France in 1216, part of its defences were still wood and earth, though in 1221 its castellan Engelard de Cigogne was authorised to commence a series of works
A stronger bridge was officially opened by the vicar of Churchtown in 1984. The River Wyre flows into the Irish Sea at Fleetwood and rises near Tarnbrook in Wyresdale.
In the background is the 12th-century parish church of St Nicholas, which has been superseded by the ultra-modern church of St George in the 'new' town of Letchworth.
It was designed by William Huckville, and built by the local builders J Honour & Sons; it replaced the original museum in a shed at the bottom of the garden!
Actually, several more things have disappeared, including the signpost, which has been replaced by much smaller signs that are partially covered by the hedge.
Note the boats pulled up above the high- water mark, the free-range livestock grazing, and the vegetable plot by the cottage.
On Christmas Day, creaks and rumbles were heard, likened to thunder by farm workers and artillery fire by the veterans of Waterloo. The ground then shuddered and collapsed on Boxing Day.
All the coastline, comprising most of the parish of Stanton St Gabriel, was acquired by the National Trust between 1967 and 1972.
The first burial in the churchyard was in 1729; until then coffins were strapped to pack horses and taken by the 'corpse road' over Mardale Common for burial at Shap.
Extensive archaeological digs in recent years by the local university staff and students should throw more light on the history of Trelleck.
Places (18)
Photos (360)
Memories (4406)
Books (10)
Maps (101)