Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- St Helens, Merseyside
- Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside
- Billinge, Merseyside
- Haydock, Merseyside
- Rainford, Merseyside
- St Helens, Isle of Wight
- Earlestown, Merseyside
- St Helen's, Isles of Scilly
- Theddlethorpe St Helen, Lincolnshire
- Grange Park, Merseyside
- Rainhill, Merseyside
- St Helens, Cumbria
- St Helen's, Yorkshire
- St Helen's, Sussex
- Blackbrook, Merseyside
- Bold Heath, Merseyside
- Brownlow, Merseyside
- Rainhill Stoops, Merseyside
- New Boston, Merseyside
- Park Hill, Merseyside
- Peasley Cross, Merseyside
- Chadwick Green, Merseyside
- Derbyshire Hill, Merseyside
- Vulcan Village, Merseyside
- Garswood, Merseyside
- Laffak, Merseyside
- West Park, Merseyside
- Nut Grove, Merseyside
- Clinkham Wood, Merseyside
- Wargrave, Merseyside
- Sutton, Merseyside
- Portico, Merseyside
- Simm's Lane End, Merseyside
- Moss Nook, Merseyside
- Old Boston, Merseyside
- Marshall's Cross, Merseyside
Photos
257 photos found. Showing results 21 to 40.
Maps
289 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
97 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
I Lived In 1 Rockcliffe View Carlin How
I lived in 1 Rockcliffe View Carlin How, from about 1946 to 1952, then my father retired and we then moved to Loftus. My father was Jim Conway the Police Constable. I went to Skinningrove Senior School, was ...Read more
A memory of Carlin How in 1946 by
Memories
HI, Colin Smith.does anyone remember my mum and dad .Alice Mary and Teddy Smith.I remember the good old times in St,Helens going fishing in spoggy brook for stillte backs.and the old Taylor Park and Victoria park when you go ...Read more
A memory of St Helens by
The School Of The Holy Child, Laleham Abbey
heads the label in a dictionary of music that I received as a prize in Upper IA. No date. It must have been 1955. My name was/is Margaret Morley. I joined the school on my return from Malaya in 1951, followed by ...Read more
A memory of Laleham
Childhood Memories
As a young boy in mid to late 1940s and early 1950s I used to travel from my home in Wisbech to spend my summer holidays with my grand parents who used to live in Marley Lane. They had a bungalow called Birch Holme that was white in ...Read more
A memory of Battle by
Rainham Essex 1939 1948
Hi my name is Ken Craze we moved to Dunroamin' Villa Upminster Rd from Hornchurch in 1935 when I was 4yo, Mum, Dad, my brother George and sister Lily. My first memory being outside Mrs Lindsay's shop with my mother a few days ...Read more
A memory of Edmonton by
Looking For Family And Friends From 'old' Birkenhead
Hi, I have just found this great site - thank you! I am trying to write some family history, especially about our life in Birkenhead, for my two daughters - who have grown up in Scotland - where my ...Read more
A memory of Birkenhead by
Flowers And Veg At Gower's Queens Road.
My father, Albert Victor Catt, known as Vic, worked for Mr Gower for many years either side of WW2. My father had a curvature of the spine which prevented him for joining the forces so he was employed to produce ...Read more
A memory of Hastings by
60 Years On And I Still Love It!
My Auntie May Howard and her husband Frank, from St. Helens, had a wooden holiday bungalow she called Homestead in Dee Avenue Talacre - it was definitely 1961 onwards and possibly just before that and the community centre ...Read more
A memory of Talacre by
When I Was 5
I remember getting off a bus in Upper George Street with my dad and walking down towards George Street and I saw the library and said what's that pointing - my dad said "It's a library and you borrow books from there". I was amazed and ...Read more
A memory of Luton in 1957 by
The Farm On Broad Lane
I was four years old and lived with mum in a caravan parked in this farmer's field along with other caravaners. Mum and dad would have paid rent to the owner of the farm. I was the only youngster around and had no choice ...Read more
A memory of Burtonwood in 1959
Captions
52 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
St Helen's House is connected with the church, while on the right are the delightfully named May Cottage, Sycamore House, Little Acre and Church Cottage.
St Helen's Church, from where this photograph was taken, aptly deserves its epithet 'Cathedral of the Fylde': it is a magnificent building whose earliest parts date from the 12th century
At St Helen's Church the corbelled, pinnacled and crocketed tower stands out in more ways than one: it seems curiously at odds, in size and style, with the rest of the church.
One of the most beautiful of the many lovely Broads churches is St Helens at Ranworth, a short walk from the staithe.
A fairground, market, ice-cream stalls, and so on were all to be found here in their day.
Situated in the shadow of the grand church of St Helen's, the castle, now in the care of English Heritage, originated as a Norman manor house; it ultimately become the property of the Breton La Zouch family
The village derives its name from the fact that it was the location of Garstang's parish church, St Helen's, which lies beyond the cottages at the far end of the street.
Stone from Waddington Fell was used to rebuild the church of St Helen in 1901. Only the tower of the old church remains - it dates back to c1500. That too was built from Waddington Fell stone.
At St Helen's Church the corbelled, pinnacled and crocketed tower stands out in more ways than one: it seems curiously at odds, in size and style, with the rest of the church.
Once upon a time, quiet, low- pollution trolley buses brought people into Church Street, which, before its uninspired redevelopment, was the main shopping thoroughfare.
Church Lane runs north from the High Street towards its eastern end, with St Peter's Church a short way along it. The tower is 15th-century, but most of the rest was rebuilt in Victorian times.
Nearer to the camera, the High Street narrows at the junction with West St Helen Street.
St Helen's churchyard contains a great historical treasure: an Anglo-Saxon churchyard cross, the most important pre-Conquest monument in Nottinghamshire (right).
In the middle distance is the steeple of St Helen's parish church, and to its left is the Malthouse.
Rebuilt in 1867 by John Loughborough Pearson, the architect of the eastern extension of Wakefield Cathedral, the parish church of St Helen looks down on the town's market place.
Still close to the Yorkshire county boundary and south- west of Harworth, Oldcotes village is situated at the crossroads of the A634 and A60; Main Street runs east from the A60 Doncaster Road
Trees and St Helen's church make a splendid backdrop. This view shows how the church looked after its rebuilding in 1901.
The ancient church of St Helen, known as 'the cathedral of the Fylde', dates from the 12th century and was once the parish church for Garstang, two miles away.
Further south, Nos 32 and 34 jut into the road, narrowing it considerably.
This unusual viewpoint is from the tower of St Helen's parish church; we are looking south over the roofs of Brick Alley Almshouses and their panelled chimney stacks. These were rebuilt in 1718-20.
Because of its very constricted site, St Helen's Church is immensely wide but relatively short.
The Town Hall was built between 1678 and 1685 at a cost of £2,772.
In this picture we can see the small stream that runs down from Waddington Fell and the Moorcock Inn as it runs right through the centre of the village to join the Ribble.
In this picture we can see the small stream that runs down from Waddington Fell and the Moorcock Inn as it runs right through the centre of the village to join the Ribble.
Places (64)
Photos (257)
Memories (97)
Books (0)
Maps (289)