Places
26 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Cemmaes Road, Powys
- Six Road Ends, County Down
- Road Weedon, Northamptonshire
- Severn Road Bridge, Gloucestershire
- Roade, Northamptonshire
- Berkeley Road, Gloucestershire
- Harling Road, Norfolk
- Road Green, Devon
- Builth Road, Powys
- Cross Roads, Yorkshire
- Steele Road, Borders
- Cross Roads, Devon
- Four Roads, Dyfed
- Road Green, Norfolk
- Biggar Road, Strathclyde
- Clarbeston Road, Dyfed
- Five Roads, Dyfed
- Eccles Road, Norfolk
- Grampound Road, Cornwall
- Morchard Road, Devon
- Wood Road, Greater Manchester
- Four Roads, Isle of Man
- St Columb Road, Cornwall
- Clipiau, Gwynedd (near Cemmaes Road)
- New Road Side, Yorkshire (near Silsden)
- New Road Side, Yorkshire (near Cleckheaton)
Photos
14,329 photos found. Showing results 3,381 to 3,400.
Maps
476 maps found.
Books
5 books found. Showing results 4,057 to 5.
Memories
11,058 memories found. Showing results 1,691 to 1,700.
Life On Norwood Park
We moved to a prefab on Norwood Park when I was seven. Our address was Elder Road. We had a great childhood there, free to roam around the park, go to the swings and paddling pool, watch the steam locos on the ...Read more
A memory of Norwood Green in 1954 by
Pound Street
My first main job on leaving school (Shaw House) was as a tea boy-dogsbody at H C James timber and builders merchants in Pound Street. For quite a while I cycled daily from Highclere Castle, approx 4 miles, it took me just over half an ...Read more
A memory of Newbury in 1956 by
Dalelands
The car in this picture is parked outside my old home. I wonder, was it my Dad's car? Not many of us had cars then. I spent many hours under the lamp-post as it got dark, before I got called in. We were pretty safe to play out in ...Read more
A memory of Market Drayton in 1960 by
White Tomkins & Courage
In the 1960s I used to hurry down Nutley Lane each morning to my job as telephonist at WTC, which was situated a few road away at the distal end of Nutley Lane and has long since disappeared. WTC was a thriving, example of local ...Read more
A memory of Reigate in 1963
Champion Crescent
I went to St Michael's School in Champion Crescent. My grandparents Annie and Ernie bines lived opposite the road. Good times.
A memory of Sydenham in 1959 by
The Pier And Esplanade
I was born in Sudley Road nursing home, Bognor, and we lived in Nyewood Lane, but I used to stay frequently with my grandmother in her flat a couple of hundred yards from the Royal Norfolk Hotel. One of my earliest ...Read more
A memory of Bognor Regis in 1946 by
Earith Was In Huntingdonshire And Still Is
I was born in St Ives in 1939 but lived in Earith at what is now number 43. Next door was my Grandad's grocer's shop - Bert Russell. I moved to Peterborough in 1958 where I still live in Werrington Village. ...Read more
A memory of Earith in 1940 by
Early Years
I was born in 1953 in the front room bedroom at 103 Chamber Road, Hollinwood, Oldham. My Dad Denis Murray was from Oldham, son of Simeon and Margaret Murray from Talbot Street. I remember walking to Corpus Christi School on Old Lane with ...Read more
A memory of Oldham in 1953
Toft Hill
My nana and grandad lived at Toft Hill and although we were Forces children, the trip back home to Toft Hill was always brilliant. Sat in front of the open fire with my Nana's home-cut chips (my nana was called Jean Alderson and ...Read more
A memory of Toft Hill in 1980 by
Traffic Duty Dewsbury Road 1960
In 1960 I was a very young Police Constable at Dewsury Road Police Station. One of my duties was traffic duty at the bottom of Dewsbury Road. I think it was at the junction with Great Wilson Street and Meadow Road (not ...Read more
A memory of Leeds in 1960 by
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Captions
5,036 captions found. Showing results 4,057 to 4,080.
Properties on the seaward side are almost unique in Britain, as they front onto the beach without a road between.
A scattered hillside village on a minor road in a wooded area near the Surrey border. Mushroom growing, brick making and fullers earth extraction were local industries.
A scattered hillside village on a minor road in a wooded area near the Surrey border. Mushroom growing, brick making and fullers earth extraction were local industries.
Notice how the children stand unconcernedly in the middle of the road in this charming photograph!
The cannon is no longer there, and the monument, although still in almost the same place, now stands in the middle of a roundabout on a busy road.
Compared to the new road bridge (left) the railway bridge on the right seems so clumsy – its foundations had to be built under the water, and go down some 45 feet below the low-water mark
There is no motor traffic to be seen on the road. Beyond the shops are the residential houses of Hartington Street. On the left is H Ledgerwood's, a grocer's.
Bradley Road, which we see here, was the only section completed before local objections and the outbreak of hostilities shelved the plan indefinitely.
This rare shot shows the old turnpike cottage (left) at Holme Toll Bar, before the corner was cleared for road widening, looking westwards from Stoborough to East Holme.
Their offer to build a road to the church was declined.
A row of houses was built on the old road to Lampeter and another on the street to the church (visible on the right).
Three young boys in the distinctive uniform of Christ's Hospital school at Horsham, accompanied by a lady, pass by the 16th- and 17th-century cottages which stood at the beginning of Farnham Road.
Bearing in mind that this was the Great North Road , the A1, which now by-passes the town, the scene is remarkably tranquil.
and past Mill Hill Golf Club bordering Thistle Wood and Scratch Wood (a rural name now adopted by the local motorway service station), and take a moment to reflect on a pre-dual carriageway Great North Road
The newly widened road begins to rise in the distance up to Loftus, whilst the United Bus Company bus stops are placed in neat lay-bys.
When Frith's photographer visited Kings Langley in the 1890s, cattle wandered freely along the High Street; but by 1955, the motor car was firmly established as king of the road. He
This is now a one-way road system, and the van is going the wrong way! There are lots of thatched cottages in Crowland owing to the small town's close proximity to the Norfolk reed beds.
From the work-yard of George Dixon, builder and mason, we look down on a surviving Penrith institution, Brunswick Road Junior School.
South of the town, beyond the stock market, the Bridgwater Road crosses the River Brue, here canalised.
The new turnpike road that was built bypassing Mulberry Green destroyed the trade catering for the coach passengers.
In 1800, Aberaeron was little more than a farm and inn by the main coast road where a bridge crossed the Aeron.
Staines may have got its name from the stone- paved remains of a branch of the Roman road of Akeman Street, that once ran to the important Roman station of Ad Pontes nearby, or perhaps
Studs on the road surface mark the only traffic crossing in Kettering at this date. On the right, Gordon Thoday, with branches throughout East Anglia, sold dress fabrics.
Dorans the photographers sold their pictures here, and further on, in the middle of Pier Road, there was the Magpie Café, still today nationally famous for fish and chips.
Places (26)
Photos (14329)
Memories (11058)
Books (5)
Maps (476)