Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Places
3 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
1,193 photos found. Showing results 321 to 340.
Maps
27 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 385 to 2.
Memories
489 memories found. Showing results 161 to 170.
Drakeholes, Gatehouses
Drakeholes is a great little spot on the Chesterfield Canal. Famous for its tunnel and the White Swan pub, or "Mucky Duck" as it was once known. Above the tunnel sat two small derelict Gatehouses, once the grand entrance to ...Read more
A memory of Drakeholes
Southall Town 50's 60's 70's 80's
Between 1950 - 1980's the family owned a bakers shop at 84 High Street. P.G.WOODFORD & SON (opposite the Police Station). If anyone has memories of this period it would be good to get in touch. I ...Read more
A memory of Southall by
Clifton Road School
I also remember Miss Curtain and Miss Lidstone the stairs and the ice slides, Alan Newall lived in Regina road past the cross road towards the canal i lived at no 57 with my cousin Colin James who was a good friend of Alans. We used ...Read more
A memory of Southall by
Footbridge Over The Canal
I recall the day the iron footbridge was lowered into place over the canal. I'm probably wrong but I think it was lowered into its position by a huge crane, how they got it to the bridge I've no idea. Have I dreamt this ...Read more
A memory of Carnforth in 1945 by
Early '50s
Lived Wolverley - Just a few items on Kiddr from dim recall -town cinema - a screening of a western, Jeff Chandler as Indian warrior - Cochise? -a bigtop circus - Billy Smart or similar, at top of the big hill nr rly Station -dentist ...Read more
A memory of Kidderminster in 1952 by
Dynea, Glamorgan Canal
Can anyone remember upper and lower boat? I was told that my grandparents lived in the lock keepers cottage at Dynea and I know my grandmother Dora Bateman/Jones was born in Pencoed with the rest of her ...Read more
A memory of Rhydyfelin by
Rip
I remember the day very well my dad woke us all up to tell us we would have to leave our house .. We lived @ no1 Daniel adamson ave as I looked out of my bedroom window to the right . Usually I could see over the ship canal . But all that I I ...Read more
A memory of Irlam by
Family Woodward And Bellamy
I have ancesters in Lapworth from about early 1800s living at Windmill Farm, Canal House and Tapster Brook House where they Farmed. Family names where Woodward and Bellamy. Any Bellamys still in the area ? June Tomes.
A memory of Lapworth in 1880 by
Crabtree's Farm
I wasn't born in Disley. My Grandparents built a little wooden bungalow in a field owned by the Crabtree family. It was built before the war for holidays. Before that they had a big tent and all their family would go to stay. During ...Read more
A memory of Disley in 1950 by
Father's House!
My Father, John (Jack) Lovelock lived in Weaver's Cottages, he learnt to swim in the K & A Canal alongside. We used to walk past the large detached house towards the end of the towpath you can see and there were always budgies in a cage/aviary there in the 1960's.
A memory of Newbury by
Captions
720 captions found. Showing results 385 to 408.
There were nine swing bridges over the canal, seven of them being where major roads crossed. Some crossing points not considered important enough for a bridge were provided with ferries.
This must be a very early photograph of the navigation, for the canal did not open until 1 January 1894. 36 miles long, and many years (and financial crises) under construction, it linked Manchester to
It was once a modest seaport for the Bude Canal but grew in size and importance after the railway arrived in the 1890s.
Although it looks like a Gothic folly, this roundhouse was lived in by a lengthmen and his family who collected tolls from passing barges on the Thames and Severn canal.
In the one hundred years following the building of the Peak Forest Canal in 1801 the population of Romiley tripled.
The bridge boosted the local economy by enabling coal from the Forest of Dean to be transported across to Sharpness, from where it was shipped inland up the canal to Gloucester and the Midlands
It was 1790 before the construction of the Oxford Canal, with a wharf at Brinklow, brought real prosperity. Brinklow is town- sized today, but it is basically a commuter village.
The Talbot Arms pub on the right hand side of the photograph has now been renamed the Tunnel Top because there is an air vent nearby for the canal tunnel that runs under the present-
There were once thirteen cotton mills here, and the town was linked by both canal and rail to other industrial centres all around.
Once a canal feeder, Chasewater was developed for recreational purposes in the late 1950s offering sailing and boating.
Here, from the Brecknock & Abergavenny Canal of 1812, Abergavenny can be seen in the distance.
Here, from the Brecknock & Abergavenny Canal of 1812, Abergavenny can be seen in the distance.
A ditch ran alongside the building until the 1850s, intended to link Southampton with the Andover Canal and the River Test.
A canal to Tiverton once started from near French Weir.
The left-hand one – the 'Stafford' – sports its Fellows, Morton & Clayton livery, a company that stopped trading when the canals were nationalised in 1948.
The Basingstoke canal of 1794 linked the Wey and Godalming Navigation (the River Wey) with Basingstoke.
John Smeaton and Thomas Telford were among the 18th-century engineers who designed this essential section of the Lea Navigation Canal and River Lea, which allowed hundred-ton ships to reach Hertford
It takes its name from the deep cutting which was made through the hills for the Basingstoke Canal in 1791-92.
New Canal commemorates one of the many open waterways which ran through the medieval streets until the 19th century. The largest of the waterways was known as Town Ditch and was filled in 1875.
New Canal commemorates one of the many open waterways which ran through the medieval streets until the 19th century. The largest of the waterways was known as Town Ditch and was filled in 1875.
Once a canal feeder, Chasewater was developed for recreational purposes in the late 1950s offering sailing and boating.
Thorne was an important inland port linking the South Yorkshire coalfield and the River Don with the Aire and Calder Navigation and the River Humber via the Stainforth and Keadby Canal.
These were built wider than normal canal locks in order to take wherries, which were broader in the beam than ordinary barges.
The canal turns to the north-east before reaching Broad Oak Bridge.
Places (3)
Photos (1193)
Memories (489)
Books (2)
Maps (27)

