Maps

370 maps found.

Books

1 books found. Showing results 4,657 to 1.

Memories

10,360 memories found. Showing results 1,941 to 1,950.

Pear Tree Lane House?

My grandmother (Edith Florence Pawley) worked in service in Shorne (I have a very badly damaged photo). I have a postcard written to her from her fiance, addressed to her c/o Mrs Levy, Court Wood, Pear tree Lane, Shorne, probably ...Read more

A memory of Shorne by dtpankhurst

Good Old Days,

Hi my name is Brian Aspey I was at mobberley 1964 to 66 my number was 93. Me berry was the head big fella I was in shaftbury house they had just been build.dose any one remember a coloured boy think his name was joey rose and another boy called Donald Lindsey.

A memory of Mobberley

The Park Etc.

I lived in Th ePark 1954 till 1963.I went to Grange Juniors and Seniors too.My front gate was right opposite the third gate to Ealing Girls Grammar too.That it now part of the University.Byron and Noel Houses are still there.There had been a ...Read more

A memory of Ealing by bobconniesullivan

Schooldays At Bexley Tech In Townley Rd, 1961 66,

I was at Hall Place for a year in 1961, originally at Brook Street girls school, Northumberland Heath. I loved it there, was there recently remembering happy days. At the main school in Townley Rd I ...Read more

A memory of Bexleyheath by vikkifenlon

Iverson F.C.

In the early sixties I played football for a local Kilburn team call Iverson F.C. which was managed by Alf Taylor for many years. Alf and his wife Ethel and daughter Pat lived in Ariel road which was a turning off of Iverson ...Read more

A memory of Kilburn by kauder

1 The Hollies, Little Sutton, (Now Called Tara A Wee?)

Hi , can anyone help. My great grandparents Kate and William James Collins lived at 1 The Hollies, approx. date 1930,s the cottage is still standing on the A41, just on the corner before you turn ...Read more

A memory of Little Sutton by Valerie Waring

Beryl Baker

I met Beryl Baker is 1949 when we were patients at a convalescent home in Exmouth. I was 10 and Beryl would have been about the same age. During the month that we were there, we became firm friends. We corresponded for years ...Read more

A memory of Gilfach goch by jilllovescricket

14 Years 'on The Post'

On the right hand side of this photo is the Post Office, & on the extreme right is the Delivery Office ‘deck’. This is where the lorries of mail were unloaded. These would arrive through the night, & the mail unloaded ...Read more

A memory of Great Malvern by bru.enzer

Hayes 1949 1971

I was born in Hayes at 3, Botwell Lane which was a big old house (now grade 2 listed) divided into three flats. As a young child it was a creepy old place and said to be haunted. I believe nuns lived there at one point and during the war ...Read more

A memory of Hayes by m.claxton

Living In Teddington 1950s To 1980s

We moved from 76 Princes Road in 1957 to the other end of Teddington, to 143 High Street, opposite Kingston Lane. My parents bought the house for about £1400 (yes fourteen hundred) as a refurb project. It still had ...Read more

A memory of Teddington

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Captions

6,977 captions found. Showing results 4,657 to 4,680.

Caption For Poole, Barges And The Quay 1908

The building on the middle left is the Customs House, whose officials would have worked around the clock checking vessels arriving from foreign ports for contraband and diseased passengers or crew

Caption For Torcross, General View 1907

On the road behind the houses there is a mouldering old Sherman tank. It was lost during the 1944 rehearsals, and only recovered in 1988.

Caption For Cambridge, 1st Eastern General Hospital C1918

As more and more injured men came back from the front, a larger hut hospital was built on the playing fields of King's and Clare Colleges, with 'open-air' wards such as this one housing the patients.

Caption For Richmond, The Channel 1929

Swale House on the extreme left was the home of Joe and Veronica Pease, great hosts of balls and parties.

Caption For Piercebridge, West View C1955

On the right is the village police house; its high pointed wooden porch looks more like Welsh architecture than that of the north-east of England.

Caption For Sutton, Post Office And High Street C1955

Both the Crown and the George & Dragon public houses (on the right-hand side of the street) have ceased trading, and are now private dwellings.

Caption For Lavenham, Water Street C1955

De Vere House, on the right, which was largely dismantled and rebuilt in the 1920s, has gables, jetties, oriel windows and brick nogging.

Caption For Martlesham, The Hill C1955

The Red Lion (right) dates from c1580, and has an oriel window similar to those on the Ancient House in Ipswich. The pub figurehead gave rise to the phrase 'As red as a Martlesham lion'.

Caption For Southwold, Park Lane C1955

The bay windows and porch of the adjoining house have now been removed and the building re-fronted. James Maggs (who died in 1890), the Southwold diarist, lived opposite.

Caption For Westleton, The Village Green And Pump C1965

Pond House has the former village pump outside, here being used by two children.

Caption For Tregaron, View From The Church Tower C1965

On the right is a half-timbered building that houses a bank.

Caption For Newlyn, Harbour 1913

A flotilla of assorted sailing vessels speed on the ebb tide towards the light house marking the harbour entrance, whilst a lone sculler (to the lower left) makes ponderous progress as he battles with

Caption For Dinas Powys, Cardiff Road C1955

Cardiff Road (pictured here) is a classic example of these new dwellings, with the finest houses executed by Dashwood Caple.

Caption For Earls Barton, The Square C1965

The museum is housed in what was once Barker's shoe factory.

Caption For Newnham, The Village C1955

A modern stone house now fills the gap between the hall and the stone cottages.

Caption For Chapel St Leonards, The Beach C1955

Again there are houses on the sand hills. The breakwater timbers have a worn look about them, but they still served their purpose, and formed little pools for baby crabs to hide in.

Caption For Leeds Castle, 1892

Built on the site of a 9th-century royal manor house, Leeds Castle became a royal fortress on the accession of Edward I.

Caption For Falmouth, Market Strand 1890

The new portion of the town lies for the most part on high ground, and the commodious houses and charming terraces overlook the magnificent harbour on the one side and the English Channel on the other.

Caption For Wadhurst, Castle 1903

This is not a real castle, of course, but rather a battlemented house of about 1818; it was greatly enlarged by Edward Buckton Lamb, that eccentric Victorian architect, and others by 1870.

Caption For London, Piccadilly 1910

From the 18th century onwards houses and shops were built that were to bring the street its reputation for refined living.

Caption For London, Bank Of England And Royal Exchange 1886

In 1838 there was a grat conflagration which began in the rooms of Lloyd's coffee-house. Thousands of tons of masonry fell and the old Royal Exhange was destroyed.

Caption For Marlborough, Polly Tea Rooms C1955

This Georgian building, photographed before it was partly destroyed by fire in 1966, houses the Polly Tea Rooms, which were established in 1928.

Caption For Sutton, The Cock Hotel And High Street C1955

Its replacement was an uninspiring office block called Old Inn House.

Caption For Amersham, Garden Of Remembrance C1958

Looking north from an upper window of the Griffin, now an ASK pizza house, the Memorial Gardens were created in 1949 to commemorate the dead of the two world wars.