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Memories
88 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
Dunsmore People And Happenings Remembered
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION In 1995, when the first edition of this history was published, it seemed incredibly optimistic to have had three hundred copies printed for a market which was ...Read more
A memory of Dunsmore by
Straining The Memory
I attended primary school at Horstead Keynes briefly until it changed location a few miles away. (I went there as well but can't for the life of me recall the name of the place.) The head mistress was the tall and ...Read more
A memory of Horsted Keynes in 1953 by
A Beautiful Place
I arrived in 1953 to live with my father and stepmother in Marbury. I have very mixed feelings of my life here. The countryside was beautiful, my love of nature and animal life has never left me. Bill's lawns (our name for the ...Read more
A memory of Marbury in 1953 by
My Time In Harlow Wood &Nbsp;
I was in Harlow Wood Hospital on and off for about 3years, first in Ward 1 which was a boys' and men's ward, it was also called Portland Ward, and Sister Langton was in charge. I was about 10 and when I first went in I ...Read more
A memory of Mansfield in 1953 by
Growing Up In Barnes 1950s
We moved to Glebe Road in 1952 (Cousland) and it was a wonderful place for children. We had a back gate opening on to the common and made full use of it. The grass was cut every year and baled for hay and we used to rush out ...Read more
A memory of Barnes by
What A Scare
It was a cold and wet evening when I had arrived in Peterborough, and having little money on me certainly not enough to pay for some hotel. I had been thumbing lifts from various towns, but as it was teeming it down with rain, I did not ...Read more
A memory of Eye in 1971 by
Those Were The Days
I was born in the home of my grandparents John and May (nee Hulse) Yeomans in Mere Road, my mother being the former Kathleen Yeomans. My immediate neighbours on either side were Jack and May Platt and family ...Read more
A memory of Weston in 1940 by
Asylum Road Arlesey
Alma Allen was born at home in Asylum Road, Arlesey, now called Hospital Road. They later moved in with Herbert's dad, Big Jim, who lived in the Gothic Farm House that was at the bottom of the yet to be built Lynton Avenue. One ...Read more
A memory of Arlesey in 1930 by
Sarnesfield Court
Mum was a cleaner here in the immediate post-war (WW2) years. I have a memory of a large-scale model aircraft (Westland Lysander ?) on a large table, possibly in the entrance hall. So many country houses were demolished ...Read more
A memory of Sarnesfield by
French Kid
I was a french kid like can see and used to come in Hythe to my grand-parents house not very far from here in Hotspur Close. And I have meet a girl that was the grand daughter of Mr Stewart that as own the West Cliff Hall and his ...Read more
A memory of Hythe in 1980 by
Captions
88 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
Built in 1587, Shipton Hall was a wedding present from Richard Lutwyche to his daughter, Elizabeth, when she married Thomas Mytton.
This fine, solid memorial to those who died in the First World War is shown here in close-up.
Here we see a close-up view of the Market Hall with its imposing front and large statues mounted over the entrance.
Built around the massive Sprotborough Hall, village life centred on the landowners, the Copley family.
In more modern times the town was a major coaching post on the great North Road, and several fine inns survive here.
Three years in the building, the Town Hall opened on 17 April 1889, and this day was proclaimed a public holiday in the town.
Often described as 'the most romantic and complete medieval manor house in England', Haddon Hall, the Derbyshire home of the Dukes of Rutland, is seen here on its limestone bluff overlooking the River
The two oldest buildings in Congleton are both inns, the White Lion near the Town Hall and the Lion and Swan shown here.
The Shire Hall of 1837 is on the right.
This 16th-century lodge, set in what was the walled kitchen- garden of Weald Hall, has unsubstantiated associations with (pre- Bloody) Queen Mary.
The building was once the Dolphin Inn; Bishop Hall lived here in the 1640s, hence the popular name.
First they were taken to Tenterbanks school, seen here on the right, for medical checks; then they went to the Market Hall, where refreshments were provided, before being dispersed to families around
Newby Hall was built by Sir Christopher Wren for the MP of Ripon, Sir Edward Blackett, during the 1690s.
Jumbo the water tower can be seen, but work had only just started on the town hall, so its great tower has not yet appeared.
Viewed here from the Fossgate entrance, the hall is the largest timber-framed building in York; the undercroft is the oldest part.
The pretty estate village of Hovingham in the Vale of Pickering is famous for Hovingham Hall, built about 1760 by Thomas Worsley, Surveyor General to William III.
The Town Hall was built on the site of the old chapel-of-ease.
Here we see the bustling Tuesday market.
Here we see the bustling Tuesday market.
Cromwell's family farmed at Slepe Hall in St Ives, but by all accounts they were not particularly successful at it; they were even thought to have contemplated emigrating to America at one point.
The wonderfully over-the- top Baroque town hall is a triumph for the town, and much better than the pallid neo-classical one it replaced.
Here, just beyond the fountain, the bothy still survives, but with a tiled roof, while the Shire Hall, opened in 1911, with its balustraded hipped roof and built in mellow brick and stone, is now used
East Howe Congregational Hall on the corner displays a poster for YMCA Club events.
Here we see a rural scene in a fold of the Downs - now much more wooded and obscured by trees.
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