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
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Maps
7,034 maps found.
Books
163 books found. Showing results 4,585 to 4,608.
Memories
22,913 memories found. Showing results 1,911 to 1,920.
Families
On the 27th of December 1956 my ex-husband KEITH GEORGE JEARY was born at 6 UPPER CLOSE where he lived with his parents until we were married at Holy Trinity Church on the 6th of November 1982 - both of my children Emily and Dominic were ...Read more
A memory of Forest Row in 1956 by
First Memories
My father, Richard (Dick) Cherrington was the village policeman in Nether Wallop during World War 2 and I was born in the Police House in the village in August 1944. My first memories ever were of an apple tree in our garden which ...Read more
A memory of Nether Wallop in 1947 by
98 & 100 High Street
These two shops in the High Street in Crowle were owned by my grandmother Rose Raper. They were handed down to my father and aunt. My dad Raymond Raper had the grocers shop at number 98 and we lived above the shop until I was ten ...Read more
A memory of Crowle by
Happy Holidays In Abersoch
Since 1962 I have always been to Abersoch at least once a year if not two three or four times!! In the early years we always stopped in a flat over the cowsheds at Tyn y Mur farm. ( These have now been beautifully converted ...Read more
A memory of Abersoch in 1965 by
School Bus And Pub
The old school bus in the photo was used to take me and other children of the village to school it was affectionately known as "kemps cronk"as it was owned by Tony Kemp and his brother who owned the local garage. The fox and ...Read more
A memory of Tillingham in 1972 by
Happy Days In Thorne Park
Happy days in the paddling pool and on the swings, the old parkie taking your name for riding your bike in the park, what did he do with all the names? Remembrance Day in the park in 1963 as a cub, Mr Metcalf leading us. Church ...Read more
A memory of Thorne in 1962 by
Living With Nanny
I remember well living with my nanny in Neames Forstell, she was Rose Beake, a formidable lady, but oh how I loved her. I remember going to Selling school, and if it rained or snowed being brought home in the police car by Sargeant ...Read more
A memory of Selling in 1954 by
Old Redding Both Famous And Notorious !
Old Redding is a hilly rural lane connecting Hatch End with Harrow Weald. It is notorious for its connection with The Grimsdyke Hotel where Gilbert of Gilbert and Sullivan fame met his death in a drowning ...Read more
A memory of Hatch End in 1963 by
Bank Holidays
Eastenders without gardens used to flock to Chingford Plains on a Bank Holiday to enjoy the grass and forest. Crowded buses used to terminate at the Royal Forest Hotel and then park in the front of the hotel ready for departure. Later ...Read more
A memory of Chingford in 1958 by
Childhood Holidays
My gran bought 3 caravans in 1957 which were on the caravan site at Lower Largo. My parents, brother, me, my aunt, my uncle and their 2 children all spent all our holidays there - summer, easter, bank hols, etc. Us children ...Read more
A memory of Lower Largo in 1957 by
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 4,585 to 4,608.
Troops were billeted at the shoreward end pavilion during the Second World War, though it had re-opened to the general public by 1946.
Dating from 1823, they are in a pallid and unconvincing Gothick, its symmetry giving away the fact that Smirke was not designing in his normal Neo-Classical style.
This view of the Stonebow shows the length of the long open room on the top floor: this is the old city Guildhall, with a fine open timber roof of about 1520.
As with many seaside resorts, one of the popular attractions was a trip in a boat.
The long bridge over the wide Usk river separates Crickhowell from the neighbouring village of Llangattock.
Rotten Row, a corruption of route du roi, was a ride set aside for equestrians and fashionable promenaders.
To the right of the arch is Apsley House, one of only two or three of Piccadilly’s great houses to survive. Known popularly as ‘Number One, London’, it was built by Robert Adam in the 1770s.
The hilltop town of Shaftesbury has wide views over the Blackmore Vale and thousands of acres of rolling Dorset countryside. Some locals still use its old name of Shaston.
The balconied St Germans Hut was a shooting box belonging to the Earl of St Germans, set high on the cliffs about a mile east of Downderry.
We are looking up the hill from the centre of town towards Camborne.
Cremyll has long been a crossing place from the Rame peninsula to the Devon side of the Tamar estuary.
The little dock at Pentewan was an important shipping place for china clay after a railway was built down the valley from St Austell in 1829. Coal was imported for St Austell.
The Premier Wireless Stores on the right is now Dean's TV Services. It and Hatherleigh next door were built as one building in 1903.
The building dates from c1450 and has been an inn since at least 1532. The Victorian brick façade was removed in 1935 to reveal the timber framing.
This view shows the docks at Weston Point.
The second highest part of Bodmin Moor is Rough Tor, at 1311 feet.
Roughlee Lake was once a popular local day out.
The village is at the north end of a magnificent two-mile long sandy beach. Until the 1800s this stretch of coast was remote, its splendours familiar only to Ilfracombe fishermen.
The timber-framed Tudor House, one of the city's finest buildings, dates back to about 1500, and has hardly changed at all since this photograph was taken.
Hampshire's only commercial airport was once at the centre of a major controversy.
The stocks, along with the pillory and the whipping post, were instruments of punishment at one time in use throughout England.
This attractive boat house is set at the foot of a steep cliff alongside the River Taf with its 'heron-priested' shore.
At around 7.00pm on the evening of 12 December 1940 Sheffield's air raid sirens sounded out their warning over the city.
During the siege of York it is thought that guns were placed on the roof here, but there is some controversy about this.
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