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Photos
66 photos found. Showing results 21 to 40.
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Memories
29 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
Our Home
We currently live in this house, or to be correct the two cottages on the left which have been knocked through and made one, and luckily now with Central heating is quite warm and cosy. Like Mike and Rachael next door whom have also posted on ...Read more
A memory of Farningham by
Old Bridge On Canal Through Wisborough Green
ERROR! This is NOT "Wye etc" It is the Wey & Arun Canal.... as in it joined the river Wey in Surrey with the River Arun in west Sussex.
A memory of Wisborough Green
A Lovely Devon Village
We moved to No. 6 Tipton Vale in 1950. Maureen a baby, myself (Valerie) and parents Eric and Joan White fom Fenny Bridges. The house was a new council house, pink and blue. Dad dug out a bank at the rear and we found ...Read more
A memory of Tipton St John in 1950 by
My Childhood In Braunton
I've put this date for want of something better. I was born in Ilfracombe in 1955 and lived with my parents, Charles and Marjorie Thomas, until I left to come and live in Spain in 1973. Our home was a house called Cherry ...Read more
A memory of Braunton in 1965 by
Memory Lane
My family moved to Waltham Cross in 1955 when I was 4 years old and I have many fond memories of the place . As a child I used to go to a little sweet shop that was between Aspland's on the corner of Park Lane and The Castle Public ...Read more
A memory of Waltham Cross in 1955 by
Happy Childhood 1950 Onwards
I lived in Hillbrow Cottages on the Eastbourne Road from 1950 to 1970s. My father, George Mison, worked in the sand quarry in Bletchingley and mum, Elsie, was a housewife. There are only 12 cottages at Hillbrow and so ...Read more
A memory of Godstone in 1950 by
Old Cotton Mills Where I Live
I have lived on cedar street in ashton under lyne from being born to getting married and moving on the street opposite cedar street , Alderley street , my mum being still on Cedar street now , I remember where my ...Read more
A memory of Ashton-Under-Lyne by
The Dell
My childhood memories of Edmundbyers have been with me all my life really. My mum & dad, aunty, uncle and cousin used to holiday in a tiny caravan on farmer Edon Sanderson's field. This was before the Derwent Reservoir was built. ...Read more
A memory of Edmundbyers in 1952 by
Teenage Years
Hot dog stall, Lewisham, Wooly's Saturday afternoon, Saturday morning pictures, Cheismans, Elvis, rock and roll, Chislehurst caves, jazz Saturday nights, chasing girls to get candle back, being chased by Deptford boys in Bedford van, ...Read more
A memory of Lewisham in 1958 by
The Green – 1952 53 Seven Years Old
I come from an RAF family that travelled across the globe until, in 1964 we ended up in Australia. Though english by birth, I am now an Australian, but I have fond memories of some parts of England where I grew ...Read more
A memory of The Green in 1952 by
Captions
42 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
A port at the mouth of the Arun, and once a Tudor royal shipyard, the old town runs east from the river bank.
Houghton is a hamlet with a long stone bridge across the tidal River Arun.
Broadbridge Mill is an ancient mill site by the River Arun.
This tiny stretch, less than a mile long, is all that is left of the grandiose Portsmouth & Arundel Canal, which linked Ford on the River Arun with Chichester and Portsmouth Harbour.
This tiny stretch, less than a mile long, is all that is left of the grandiose Portsmouth and Arundel Canal, which linked Ford on the River Arun with Chichester and Portsmouth Harbour.
We are on the navigable and tidal River Arun.
A Roman settlement on Stane Street and the navigable River Arun.
Across the Arun we head north to Fittleworth, a village running north from the River Rother up to the Petworth to Pulborough road, now the A283.
Derwent Terrace, now the A6, runs alongside the river, faced by shops and with other houses spreading up the steep hillside.
Lynmouth's twin rivers run fast and furious, and no more so than in 1952, when it suffered a terrible tragedy.
Standing beside a bridge across the River Brun, from which the town takes its name, is Burnley Town Hall.
An excursion craft passes the weir close to Lincomb Lock, now the most northern on the river.
The river runs along a neat channel here, but perhaps the greatest interest is alongside on the road.
South of Bakewell, the river runs through elegant parkland that forms the grounds of Haddon Hall.
It is so called because the river running through the valley was known originally as the Dwr, an old British word simply meaning 'water'.
Burnley means 'the place by the river Brun'; the town snuggles in a valley between the rivers Calder and Brun.
In the middle of Over and Nether Wallop, the river runs beside the road.
Only the narrow Eden Valley offers an opening, running south-east to Stainmoor and lowland England.