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 3,681 to 360.
Maps
101 maps found.
Books
10 books found. Showing results 4,417 to 10.
Memories
4,406 memories found. Showing results 1,841 to 1,850.
I Remember It Well
I went to Hayling Island Suntrap School When I was Five Years Old Around 1957/1958, I remember one boy hand his head hit by a train while looking out of the train window on a school trip and seeing blood running down the train ...Read more
A memory of Hayling Island by
Chinese Laundry In Aber.
Does anyone remember Binky's Chinese laundry in South Road? I remember watching them washing the sheets by the geulan (spelling?) just by the river at the back of the shop.
A memory of Aberystwyth by
Boston Manor Part 2
The streets around Boston Manor were more spacious and had bigger houses than Hanwell. Southdown Avenue was very grand. Going towards Elthorne Park I remember Mr Mitchell our geography teacher at Bordeston school lived. On the ...Read more
A memory of Brentford by
For The Love Of Growing Up
Susan Williams was born at Malmesbury Hospital in 1949 to John and Shelagh. We lived with my Grandparents at Lea until were housed at Charlton Park. As previous families have said, us children were blessed to live there. I ...Read more
A memory of Malmesbury
Southall 1950's
We lived in Hillingdon but I used to often visit Southall as a child as my father and uncle had shops in South Road. On Saturday my father and I used to arrive early morning then visit a cafe a few doors away with plasticised tables ...Read more
A memory of Southall by
Recollections Of Ash Vale By Lt Col Taylor
RECOLLECTIONS OF ASH VALE By Lt Col Taylor Ash Vale, viewed from the main route through it the Frimley and Ash Vale roads would not have appeared to alter a lot during the last 100 years. Houses do now ...Read more
A memory of Ash Vale by
Ballymacscanlon And Wonderfull Ireland
I worked as a consultant engineer in Ireland in the early nineteen ninety's staying in the Carrickdale hotel in Dromad, just over the border, as my base in the South whilst working in Newry. I also traveled ...Read more
A memory of Ballymascanlon by
The Other Side Of The Coin
Miss hopefully ' what I have to say will come as a surprise to you . If so I am sorry but it is all true Your father peter was a brutal cold heartless child molester I was one of is boys in the kids home he ran The ...Read more
A memory of Newnham by
Westwood Secondary
I lived at 111 Danson Crescent right by the gates to Danson Park, I went to Westwood School and played for their football team this would have been in the early sixties. I used to sell the Evening news and Standard papers on the corner ...Read more
A memory of Welling by
Tuck Shop Opposite
I remember Mrs (fatty) Parson, she put her foot through the floor one day much to the classes delight. I live up by the heath and took the penny ride to the National School every day on the 467 bus.
A memory of Dartford by
Captions
4,899 captions found. Showing results 4,417 to 4,440.
This was clearly a successful village which had made its fortune by the weaving and cloth trade, as well as through agriculture.
On the opposite side of the road, almost obscured by the dark shadow of the Town Hall, stands a Great War gun carriage.
Funded by subscriptions as part of West Worthing New Town, the new modern spacious 19th century church of St Botolph's was built near the site of an earlier chapel which had, by the 17th century,
Buckets slung on yokes were used in prehistoric times, and were still being used by the Victorians.
The huge carriage works (right) have long since gone, to be replaced in the 1980s by the entrance to the Tesco supermarket development.
It was bought by the council from Lord Wimborne for £560 and turned into a garden to mark Queen Victoria's Jubilee, which had been celebrated the previous year.
inner courtyard attackers had to breach an outer wooden door, two portcullises, a second wooden door and a third portcullis, whilst running a gauntlet of crossbow bolts and arrows fired through loops by the
Crookston was the first property to be acquired by the National Trust for Scotland.
This is reflected by the number of dining rooms we can see on our photograph.
When construction started on Heysham Harbour, the family moved out; it was bought by the Midland Railway, who were building the harbour. At the time of our photograph it was an hotel.
By the late 1950s it had become overwhelmed, and Newark Road, known as the bypass, was constructed on the east side of the village.
The boats were built to a high (and expensive) specification, the original 22ft class later being supplemented by the more affordable and manageable 17ft class.
No longer owned by the Rigg family, the hotel has been re-named in this post-World War II photograph. Otherwise, very little has outwardly changed in the interim years.
The name is Danish, meaning 'new fortress', and the strategic importance of the river crossing defended by river cliffs is emphasised by the castle.
Steel and glass were used in the construction of these offices, opened by the Queen Mother in 1967.
In 1648 Penrith was captured by the Parliamentarians, who then used it as a quarry, partially demolishing the place and selling off the stone.
By the late 1780s the ever-expanding canal network looked set to by-pass Stratford.
The position of postmaster of Tunbridge Wells was held by the Nash family, first by John Nash in 1823, then by William Nash, who so built up the postal business that it outgrew its Pantiles
In the background we can see the tall Pharos lighthouse and the North Euston Hotel, designed in 1840 by the famous architect Sir Decimus Burton.
The hill was forested after World War II by the Forestry Commission and now looks very different from this view.
The old Toll Bridge, much resented by motorists for the delays caused by cash collection, connected the East and West Ridings, and was bought and made toll free by the council in 1992.
However, by the end of the Great War, the river was dredged to a minimum depth of five feet, and several locks were added.
Buckets slung on yokes were used in prehistoric times, and were still being used by the Victorians.
Christ Church is by Sir G G Scott, of 1851, and replaces Holy Rood in the grounds of the mansion owned by the Goddard family - their history there traces back to 1560.
Places (18)
Photos (360)
Memories (4406)
Books (10)
Maps (101)