Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Hest Bank, Lancashire
- Kents Bank, Cumbria
- Copthorne Bank, Sussex
- Banks, Lancashire
- Sutton Bank, Yorkshire
- Astwood Bank, Hereford & Worcester
- Dacre Banks, Yorkshire
- Ten Mile Bank, Norfolk
- Matlock Bank, Derbyshire
- Bank, Hampshire
- Hesketh Bank, Lancashire
- Far Bank, Yorkshire
- Bank's Green, Hereford & Worcester
- Banks, Cumbria (near Lanercost)
- Banks, Dumfries and Galloway (near Kirkcudbright)
- Bunsley Bank, Cheshire
- East Bank, Gwent
- Hanwood Bank, Shropshire
- Hoole Bank, Cheshire
- Howbeck Bank, Cheshire
- Papermill Bank, Shropshire
- Pickup Bank, Lancashire
- Malkin's Bank, Cheshire
- Meal Bank, Cumbria
- Sandy Bank, Lincolnshire
- Scilly Bank, Cumbria
- Steel Bank, Yorkshire
- Bogs Bank, Borders
- Alsagers Bank, Staffordshire
- Bury's Bank, Berkshire
- Brandon Bank, Cambridgeshire
- Cat Bank, Cumbria
- Cadney Bank, Clwyd
- Dawley Bank, Shropshire
- Dean Bank, Durham
- Lade Bank, Lincolnshire
Photos
1,065 photos found. Showing results 341 to 360.
Maps
786 maps found.
Books
15 books found. Showing results 409 to 15.
Memories
6,742 memories found. Showing results 171 to 180.
Back In 1963
I was moved to Wickford with my family in December 1963, a hard winter, removal van had trouble getting up the unmade road. Coming from London, it was a bit of a sleepy village for me and especially for my teenage siblings. Had to wait ...Read more
A memory of Wickford in 1963 by
Best Four Years Of My Life As A Kid
We moved here in 1978/9 when I was 4 to 8 - St John’s Crescent, and was heartbroken when my parents split 5 years later and we had to move with my mother back to Knaresborough. Lots of lovely memories. The old ...Read more
A memory of Bishop Monkton by
The Teachers.
The lovely talented and sophisticated Miss Bartlett took the youngest class. I think she may have been to art school cos she drew a Spanish Conquistador (complete with sailboat steel helmet) in coloured chalk on the blackboard, dressed ...Read more
A memory of Luton
Beginnings
My parents moved from Pentire to Crantock when I was about 3 and Crantock is certainly ingrained in my memory as being my first home. My mother had taken a position as housekeeper to a Dr Nicholas and with it came Rose Cottage. My father ...Read more
A memory of Crantock by
Memories Of Baby Burial At Dilston Maternity Hospital
by Mr Alex Hillary (April 6th 2007) - as reported to Susan Hedworth, Community Care Assistant No, we don’t get the snow like we used to! Like it was in 1941, I mean. I was a taxi driver at ...Read more
A memory of Corbridge by
Good Old Days
i lived at 13ward gardens just by the village green.spent my youth there until moving to new zealand when i was 25,spent many a day fishing for sticklebacks in the stream by the pond back in 1964,as i got older spent many an hour in the ...Read more
A memory of Cippenham by
Croglin 1958
When my husband and I married in March 1958, he bought the cottage nearest the camera on the left; no electricity, no bathroom......it cost the princely sum of £300! The building at the end of the street is the pub, and behind the trees ...Read more
A memory of Croglin by
Fishing
This is the Fish Pond at Holden Corner, Southborough. This was one of the two accessible and popular places for boys to go fishing in Southborough - the other was the Great Bounds Lake, near Bidborough. As a boy in the 1940s and early 50s ...Read more
A memory of Southborough in 1940 by
Summer Holidays At Tyn Y Morfa
In the early 60s we used to travel to Talacre for a fortnight holiday in a caravan. One year my parents didn't pre-book but we travelled from Liverpool on the off chance we would find a place. I remember my father ...Read more
A memory of Tyn-y-Morfa by
18 Two Meadows
As a Londoner, when my new husband was offered a job in Great Yarmouth in 1964, I was excited, although a bit apprehensive about moving to the small village of Hemsby. We bought a brand new house in a new subdivision at Two Meadows. It ...Read more
A memory of Hemsby by
Captions
2,423 captions found. Showing results 409 to 432.
On the left of the picture is the long 900-ft bridge of sixteen arches, and on the opposite bank is the Town Arms. To the right is the Bridge Boat House and landing stage, now a restaurant.
Beyond the hump-backed 15th-century bridge over the River Darent, and the adjoining ford, is a picturesque Tudor house and a line of cottages looking out onto the grassy banks.
Odiham Common is on the northern bank. The canal turns to the north-east before reaching Broad Oak Bridge.
The Lewes Road used to be the main route out of town, but this is now along the east bank of the Ouse towards Lewes. This peaceful scene is now barely recognisable.
Chalford itself stands on the steep north bank. Many of the wealthy clothiers' houses were built on terraces cut into the hillside.
The imposing entrance on the right led to the Midland Bank, though why they should have removed its carved top and replaced it with a very ordinary clock is beyond me!
In the intervening years the bank has been revetted against erosion, and the millenium celebrated by the natural path for wheel chairs that encircles the pond.
Just south of Penrith, Mayburgh Henge is a circular bank of earth and stones of about 1.5 acres, with one 10ft stone at the centre. It is thought to have been built between 1000BC-2000BC.
Over the years the farm buildings have been home to a restaurant and a bank. Today, this is a pub.
The Midland Bank on the left is a fine Georgian building described by Pevsner as 'amazingly stately'.
Boys stand in their boats and paddle near the rapids, while others fish around on the bank without a concern in the world, as boys have probably done here for centuries.
The imposing entrance on the right led to the Midland Bank, though why they should have removed its carved top and replaced it with a very ordinary clock is beyond me!
A branch of Barclays Bank is on the left and WH Smith is on the right of the picture.
Maisemore village stands on the west bank of the River Severn. It is prone to flooding - in 2000, the White Hart pub was completely surrounded with water.
The premises of Barclays Bank can be seen on the right, next door to Morris Garages.
Old Laleham stands back from the reaches of the Thames, and the early boating fraternity used to enjoy catching glimpses of it from the water.
Here we see Conigar Walk running down the bank of the River Usk.
On the right hand side is the Bank of Ireland, a building dating from Georgian times and once the home of the Irish Parliament.
Kendal Grammar School sits alongside the banks of the River Kent.
Taken from Billy Banks Wood south of the Swale, this distant view shows the defensive site of Richmond Castle, and the town clinging precariously - and picturesquely - to the hillside
The town is studded with fine brick and flint houses with steep pantiled roofs - on the right is the flamboyant brick and pebble Barclay's Bank.
The miller for many years was Mr Fred Banks.
On the extreme left is J F White's tobacconist's shop next door to the branch of Lloyds Bank, while across the road is the entrance to Cheam Station Approach, with the offices of Morgan, Baines & Clark's
On the right, the street still awaits the out-of-scale London and Counties bank, erected in 1892.
Places (158)
Photos (1065)
Memories (6742)
Books (15)
Maps (786)