Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chatsworth House, Derbyshire
- Osborne House, Isle of Wight
- Brambletye House, Sussex
- Ickworth House, Suffolk
- Kingston Lacy House, Dorset
- Boscobel House, Shropshire
- Preshute House, Wiltshire
- Bolton Houses, Lancashire
- Brick Houses, Yorkshire
- Quaking Houses, Durham
- Water Houses, Yorkshire
- Bottom House, Staffordshire
- New House, Kent
- Mite Houses, Cumbria
- Lyneham House, Devon
- Church Houses, Yorkshire
- Dye House, Northumberland
- Spittal Houses, Yorkshire
- Street Houses, Yorkshire
- Tow House, Northumberland
- Halfway House, Shropshire
- Halfway Houses, Kent
- High Houses, Essex
- Flush House, Yorkshire
- White House, Suffolk
- Wood House, Lancashire
- Bank Houses, Lancashire
- Lower House, Cheshire
- Marsh Houses, Lancashire
- Chapel House, Lancashire
- Close House, Durham
- Guard House, Yorkshire
- Hundle Houses, Lincolnshire
- Hundred House, Powys
- Thorley Houses, Hertfordshire
- School House, Dorset
Photos
7,776 photos found. Showing results 4,201 to 4,220.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 5,041 to 1.
Memories
10,360 memories found. Showing results 2,101 to 2,110.
Henrietta Hope Porter
Growing up I had a good friend and neighbour, who I knew as 'Miss Porter'. She inherited her house from her Uncle who (according to her comments to a young boy) used to be a footman to Queen Victoria and was the first owner of ...Read more
A memory of Guffogland by
Barbers
I had many a dodgy haircut, and a few good ones, at De Sallas (?) In Darkes Lane. And my father and mother used to love the Embassy Club. My father used to take me wrestling at the Ritz. I saw Mick McManus, Big Daddy, Giant Haystacks, Kendo ...Read more
A memory of Potters Bar by
A School Trip.
I was going to Green Lanes Primary school for about a year before we left England, and a trip to Hatfield house was just one of the many excursions that great school took us on. I remember the little crocheted gloves worn by Elizabeth 1 ...Read more
A memory of Hatfield by
The Family Pub
The King's Head also known as The Low House was in the Felgate family for a number of years. My great grandma and grandad ran this pub along with the blacksmiths. They also brought up 14 children there goodness knows how. My grandma was ...Read more
A memory of Laxfield
Hall House
My family and I lived at 1 Hall House from 1976-1989. The house had been derelict for several years before we moved in and my father restored it over 6 months before we were able to move in. I have many great memories of living there, visiting ...Read more
A memory of Loxwood by
The Falls
I spent many happy hours here, and our house was just up the road from here so I didn't have far to go and have great fun.
A memory of Allenheads in 1960 by
Ludgershall Road
I can remember running along this road from Tidworth Down Boys School to the Ram pub and back to the school with the PE teacher a Mr Williams shouting at us from his car. This would have been in the late 1960s. I lived in ...Read more
A memory of North Tidworth by
Hubert Terrace
I often wondered who Hubert was. Other road names around were obvious. Bank Street was on a bank; School street had a school at the end of it. But Hubert Terrace? One side of my street was brick and the other was stone; something else ...Read more
A memory of Bensham in 1964 by
Happy Days At Victoria Garesfield
I remember playing "houses" in the wood with the twins Jean and Betty. Also great friends with Anne French, Jean Gardener and also Eileen Wolfington who sadly passed away many years ago. We lived in ...Read more
A memory of Victoria Garesfield by
The Stanwell I Remember In The Early 1970s
I moved to Stanwell with my parents in 1959 aged 4. When I was 11 I learnt to ride at Stanwell's pony club run by a lady called Geraldine Richardson who used to keep her ponies at the stables at the ...Read more
A memory of Stanwell in 1970
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Captions
6,977 captions found. Showing results 5,041 to 5,064.
Beyond is the White Horse, still in business, though the Northampton Brewery, with its NBC Star trademark, has long since passed into history.
Most of the houses on the left-hand side cater for holidaymakers, and new businesses have opened up to capture their trade. The pub on the left is the White Horse Inn dating from 1851.
It remained in use as a private house until about 1959, from when it served as an hotel for about forty years.
A plaque tells us that a fragment remains of the house in which Edward I held his parliament and in which the Statute of Rhuddlan was passed in 1284, and in the gable end medieval windows
Take a stroll down Church Lane and you can see that the scene on the right of this photograph has not changed at all.The little cottage on the left has been replaced by a redbrick house, and there
From the 12th century, the rearing of sheep for their wool became a major source of revenue for the monastic houses in the north of England.
The houses of Fort Crescent, which run across this picture, were built in the 1820s—it was the most fashionable part of Margate at that time.
There is a glimpse of the Great House - visited by the earl of Chatham with 15-year-old William Pitt the Younger - before Star Supply Stores and the Royal Lion Hotel (centre).
The 1970s concrete- fronted Golate House opposite the Sandringham Hotel perhaps the only exception.
Today, Worcestershire County Museum is housed in the north wing.
He gave the title of the book to his house, Shandy Hall, on the western edge of the village. Halfway down the village street on the left we can see the white-painted Fauconberg Arms.
It was originally intended for Sauvignac monks, but by 1147 it had become a Cistercian house.
The house with the timbered gable stands just north of an ancient junction where Evesham Road (the prehistoric Ridgeway) meets Feckenham Road and Sambourne Lane.
The village shop and post office in the distance beyond the children still functions, but the shop-like Gilling Club (to the left of the woman in the middle of the road) has become a house
The roofs behind, parallel to the High Row of the Market Place, are houses in Waterloo Street, demolished in 1963.
The hotel bedrooms extend over Woolworth's next door, Richmond's first chain store; it arrived c1935 and moved in 1980 to Bailey House, visible at the bottom of the Market Place.
Among the many old buildings in this stretch of the High Street is the Tudor brick Eastgate House, seen on the right, and now the Charles Dickens Centre.
Stanwoods (centre right) is the former Chantry House of the Gurteen family, great employers and benefactors in the town. The 1950s Boots (left) is on the site of the Anchor Temperance Coffee Tavern.
The town of Bishop Auckland grew around the castle and the extensive bishops' deer park with its 18th-century deer house.
The quayside on the right was developed in 1985 for residential housing with shops and a wine bar.
The triple gables of the early 17th-century house form the centrepiece, with flanking wings. John Ely, a Manchester architect, added the Tudoresque bay window to the right in 1894.
The houses were swept away during the series of 'slum' clearances that began in the 1930s.
The upper front storey of the Corn Exchange houses the Town Council's chamber and offices.
The houses on the right, examples of the late Victorian baronial style, are an interesting contrast. It is thought that their stone came from buildings in Gold Street which were demolished in 1887.
Places (80)
Photos (7776)
Memories (10360)
Books (1)
Maps (370)

