Places
10 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,534 photos found. Showing results 21 to 40.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
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Memories
8,172 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
Shops And Businesses
By this time Seeboard have taken over the Uptons building but Caffyns still have their garage premises which finally became a furniture salesroom in about 1982. the one way system has still not been created (see H252069), the restaurant is still 'Haywards' and the bank is the National Provincial.
A memory of Haywards Heath by
Princes Road
I was born in 1953 at 71 Princes Road, in 1955 we moved to 10 Church Road where I lived until 1969 when I left home. I went to Princes Road Boys school where Mr Carr was the Head and some of the teachers were Miss Gardiner, Mrs ...Read more
A memory of Buckhurst Hill by
Names Of People And Buildings.
Here we are looking down West Street with the village school visible at the end. On the left is Tetts Farm with the milk churns, while next is Manor Farm, farmed by Reg Newick. The thatched building before the ...Read more
A memory of Hinton St George
Notes From The Frith Files.
This photograph shows residents waiting for the No.144 Midland Red bus from Malvern to Worcester outside the village shops. Far left is EW Bird's butchers, left is Cromptons newsagents, off picture further left is Procters ...Read more
A memory of Powick
Moving Of The War Memorial
Note in this photo that the war memorial has been moved back and the wall lowered. Flats have been built on the Banstead house site. You could always see the green houses over the high wall from the top of the 164a bus. The ...Read more
A memory of Banstead in 1956 by
Smart's Fish Saloon.
Re Smart's Fish Saloon. My parents Peter and Wyn Pellerade owned this from 1952 to the early 60s when it was demolished to make room for flats. The site never got used but has recently been developed into a doctors surgery. ...Read more
A memory of Bishopstoke by
Childhood Memories
Knutsford holds a special place in my heart as I was born there in 1956 and spent nearly eight years of my childhood growing up in this then safe and close community. I have very strong memories of family, home, school and friends ...Read more
A memory of Knutsford in 1962 by
My Memories Of Bilsington
I can remember moving to Bilsington village when I was just over seven years old. I attended Bilsington Primary School and have clear memories of Miss Fellows (the Headmistress). She had a kind heart I think but at the time ...Read more
A memory of Bilsington in 1970 by
Number 19a Bus From Bognor Regis
Brings back memories of watching the driver remove the 'Limited Stop' board from the front of the Bus and to change back to Number 19. Use to live above Strattons Shop; my Bedroom use to overlook the Bus Stop and Overtons Garage.
A memory of Churt in 1965 by
Family Day Out Clerkenwell To Caterham 1925
The above photo depicts Dorothy Connor (nee Step) aged 10, with her late Mother Elizabeth Step (aged 46) and her Sister, Florence Step (aged 21) having alighted from the 159a Bus which brought them from their ...Read more
A memory of Caterham by
Captions
3,478 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
This row contained a general and sweet shop (note the Oxo advertisement in the window), with another general store and a teashop at the far end.
The empty shop on the left is now occupied by Doble`s motor cycles.
A bustling and lively shopping street but not yet choked with motor traffic.
The shop of J Singleton, where you could shop and also acquire a haircut, is no longer a general-purpose shop.
One of the interesting things when looking at some of these photographs is the number of shops that even the smallest of villages seemed to have.
The main street and good shopping centre is made more pleasant by the Victorian glass arcade, useful in wet weather.
When we compare this photograph with 54230, we see that since 1906, R & H Law have expanded to occupy all the top four shops on the right, and had become a large furniture and upholstery shop.
Many of the shops you see in this picture have changed hands. The shop on the corner with the awning is now McDonalds, and what was United Counties on the opposite corner is now a travel shop.
During the Edwardian era Coney Street was the place for fashionable shopping.
It included many shops - a butcher's, a grocer's, a milliner's, a shoe shop and a furniture shop. The building now awaits restoration.
The scene has changed remarkably little over the years, apart from what is sold in the shops.
No 39 High Street was Clemoes, a women's wear shop, now a pizza parlour. The first and second shop on the right was Delbridges. Today these premises are restaurants.
With increases in both population and numbers of visitors to the town, provision had to be made for their shopping requirements.
The Rows are a unique feature to Chester; they provide shops on two levels, the roofs of the shops at street level forming a pedestrian walkway for the shops on the second level.
A major redevelopment in 1870 brought many new shops and arcades to the thoroughfare.
The card shop and Susan Starr are now occupied by Abbey and Martyn James (butcher`s), whilst Bond & Sherwill and Stead & Simpson maintain the presence of an estate agent and a shoe shop.
This shop frontage shows the development of the village shop into the mini-supermarket, ultra-modern for its time.
On the left, Parnell's shop is now the Ideal Shop, still selling newspapers.
In this view the Freeman Hardy & Willis shop stands on the site of the Old Talbot, and two shops along is where the Golden Lion was situated.
It is the furthest away of these three shops (on the corner) which is the Post Office.
For five hundred years commerce has surrounded this area with ironmongers, shoemakers and fish and meat shops.
The first shop on the left is the newsagent, and next to it is the Co-op. Today both these shops are as they were, except that the newsagent no longer sells bicycles.
A rather flowery title for a small shopping development of the late 1950s on the Fairfield Estate, away to the east of the town's main shopping street.
Frank Butcher`s newsagent and tobacconist shop at the north end of High Road has a well stocked window but alas has now been demolished, and the other shops have closed.
Places (10)
Photos (2534)
Memories (8172)
Books (0)
Maps (71)