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Maps
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Memories
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Happy Days At Mill Bridge
Hi to anyone looking at this photo, I lived just up the road at Valley Cottages and used to play by the bridge, we all sat on the bridge wall and had our photograph taken. I am on the right with wellington boots on, ...Read more
A memory of Bishop's Tawton in 1955 by
Grange Farm Swimming Pool By Carol Gook
I lived in nearby Abridge, and swam at Grange Farm pool around this time, with my school, Lambourne Primary in Abridge. I learnt to swim here, in the cold water. I loved this pool, it was a magical place for ...Read more
A memory of Chigwell in 1965 by
A Tiny Hamlet Lost In Time
The year was 1970. Myself and a friend were typical 15 year old youths of the time, well, typical for our type of neighborhood. We had long hair, pierced ears, denim jeans and jackets and owned but a couple of shillings ...Read more
A memory of Trelights in 1970 by
Palace How Lane End
I was brought up at Palace How and the gentleman with the moustache is my late father, Leslie Leo Cunningham. We had the village Post Office and my late mother, Mary Anne Cunningham, was the Postmistress - I have a show display ...Read more
A memory of Loweswater by
Ffynnongroyw
I read with interest the account of Ken Davies and his childhood memories of the Garth Mill in Ffynnongroyw. We moved to Llinegr Farm on October 2nd 1961 (I was 7) and moved on November 6th 1988 after my father's death. I remember ...Read more
A memory of Ffynnongroyw in 1961 by
Two Of My Uncles Memorailzed On Obelisk At Wooburn Green
My grandfather was GM of Glory Mill in the early 1900s. My father and his siblings were raised in a house located on the grounds. There were four brothers and all served in the British ...Read more
A memory of Wooburn Green in 1920 by
Flying Man Of Pocklington
I remember going to Pocklington, in the effort to find family from our family tree. We went to Bishop Wilton. But, in browsing in Pocklington, we found out about the Flying Man of Pocklington. He said he could fly, and ...Read more
A memory of Pocklington in 1973 by
Ladd Family 1878
My grandfather Ernest Ladd, born Eastry 1878, is buried in the churchyard. Although as a child when visiting my grandmother we would tend the grave and put flowers on it, I only have a vague recollection of its location. My mother and ...Read more
A memory of Eastry in 1950 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
The Wakely Family
I was born in Lower Shillingford (Shillingford Abbot) in 1939. My grandparents Francis and Jane Wakely lived in Rectory Cottage, Higher Shillingford (Shillingford St George). My grandfather was gardener at the rectory. ...Read more
A memory of Shillingford St George by
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 4,777 to 4,800.
To the right of this photograph is a poster advertising the film You Were Meant for Me, starring Jeanne Crain and Dan Dailey, and showing at the Embassy cinema.
Our visit to Stapleford concludes with an oddity: the Hemlock Stone.
Along the street on the left stand St Stephen's Institute and the village school; beyond, on Ralph's Wife's Lane, is the church of St Stephen in the Banks.
The church in the picture is St James. This was built as a chantry chapel to All Saints, which was in the Saxon part of the town, well away from the newer area.
Major-general Thomas Harrison, who served in the Parliamentary army during the Civil War, was born in a house on the High Street.
Major-general Thomas Harrison, who served in the Parliamentary army during the Civil War, was born in a house on the High Street.
Kingsgate Castle was built in about 1860 close to the sea cliff's edge and the North Foreland itself. It is shown here romantically clothed in ivy.
Black's Canal was at the western extreme of the Gidea Hall Estate.
The Ship Inn at Gidea Park served the travellers on the Essex Great Road in the days when stage coaches thundered through on their way from London to East Anglia.
The blaze also damaged Archer's ironmongers' shop next door (with a kettle for its trade-sign). Spectators at the fire faced the added danger of having the clock fall on them.
Hedingham's dominant feature, the enormous castle keep, looms behind these cottages just to the right, out of picture. Bones were recently unearthed in a garden at Pye Corner.
The motor launch 'Hurlingham' is negotiating the lock at Teddington.
The church of St Mary has some parts that are medieval, but most of what can be seen today dates from its rebuilding between 1859 and 1860 under the supervision of Henry Woodyer.
Today the inn sign of this well-known local landmark features the former prime minister David Lloyd George, who made his home close by at Bron-y-de in 1921.
By 1861 there were 16 pubs here, and it is reckoned that at least 17 other hostelries have come and gone within this parish.
The shop on the right of this photograph is Hermitage Post Office and Stores. Today the speed limit through the village is thirty miles per hour, not forty.
The little cottages between the first two parked cars in this photograph have gone, and the Crown Inn on the right disappeared some years ago.
Two of the girls have come down from the bridge and are inspecting the ruined south-west towers.
In 1947 land behind the war memorial was landscaped as sunken gardens and their 1.3 acres became the new Gardens of Remembrance.
The church of St Lawrence has twin rood-stair turrets – these are usually found in much larger churches, such as St Mary's, Bury St Edmunds. The south porch dates from 1466.
With so many workers arriving here in the 1800s from Ireland there was a strong Roman Catholic presence and this enormous church was built in the 1870s to serve that congregation.
E J Baker, the High Street butcher, was delivering to the substantial houses, many of which still stand today.
This picture was taken at about the time when Lower Neatham Mill (pictured here) was sold by the Denyers to the Ellis family of Headley Mill. They continued to produce 100% wholemeal flour.
Feckenham once stood at the heart of Feckenham Forest, an ancient hunting ground of kings, which once covered some 200 square miles and included over 60 settlements.
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