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 4,901 to 4,920.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 5,881 to 1.
Memories
10,360 memories found. Showing results 2,451 to 2,460.
Wher We Used To Go To Play As Children
Those were the days when we could go to the Waterfalls and play all day long without any fears. Paddle in Earby beck and catch tiddlers, play hide and seek beheind the Empire Picture house, go for bike rides to ...Read more
A memory of Earby in 1952 by
Long Ago
Hi to all in Freefolk, I was just looking over some old records about my house in Surrey, when I came across the following - " Mrs. Harriett Emmeline Ella Ling born 1859 in Freefolk, married to Mr. Arthur Robert Ling born 1862 in Surrey" ...Read more
A memory of Freefolk in 1860
Growing Up Childhood Memories
I was born in Elm Park Avenue in 1937 and have memories of the Second World War and after. I can remember during the war, especially during the Blitz, bedding down with my mother under the stairs in a steel wire cage, ...Read more
A memory of Elm Park in 1940 by
Oh Happy Days
Yes I remember spending most of our (my brother John and I) summer holidays playing on Runcorn Hills. Both parents worked and so most mornings, weather permitting, we would head off to the hills from our home in Weston Village, armed ...Read more
A memory of Runcorn in 1953 by
Newington Terrace
When I was young in the 1950s I would spend some weeks of my summer vacation at my grandparents' house at 11 Newington Terrace, Elizabeth and Albert Torr. I remember swimming in the river, we would go to the weir and remove some ...Read more
A memory of Craven Arms by
My Memoirs 1964 1966 Part One
Wayne Carter My father is Frederick Carter born in London, and mother was Loraine Carter nee Chadwick was born Cyfarthfa Street Roath; mum sadly passed away in 1998. I have a younger sister Jane Carter nee ...Read more
A memory of St Mellons in 1964 by
Pond House
Hello! This is a memory of my late Mother ~ so if anyone can remember, please contact me! In 1946 my Mother was staying at Pond House in Sanderstead. She was staying with the Murdoch family and was a Nanny to Gay Murdoch. Pond House ...Read more
A memory of Sanderstead in 1946 by
Weston Road Memories
I also remember Weston Road, that is the road leading from Weston Village down into Runcorn, via the Isolation Hospital and then down into Greenway Road. My father Owen Roberts worked all his life at the ICI Castner Kelner ...Read more
A memory of Runcorn in 1952 by
Prefabs In Ripple Road Dagenham 1947 To 1959
I was born in Upney hospital in July 1947 and lived in a prefab at 703 Ripple Road. Opposite was a bone/scrap yard and along the road the Ship & Shovel pub. I went to Campbell and Dawson schools and ...Read more
A memory of Dagenham by
All The Fun Of The Fair
Who remembers the travelling fun fair that came to Blackfield in the 1960s? Did you go to Blackfield Junior school? What about skating on the frozen Gravel pits at Holbury in the winter 1962/3/4 or the Esso Cinema? or the ...Read more
A memory of Holbury in 1960 by
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Captions
6,977 captions found. Showing results 5,881 to 5,904.
A temporary memorial was set up near the Market House before this one was built.
Although retaining the form of an earlier 17th-century house, the building is essentially a drastic remodelling of 1814 by Sir Henry Halford, formally Henry Vaughan, a successful medical practitioner
In the broad High Street old inns, houses, small shops and buildings in honey-coloured local stone jostle in a medley of complementary styles.
The range of houses and outbuildings offer some refreshments, and the odd fishing boat to hire.
Diagonally opposite is Cheam Baptist Church, constructed on land which was formerly the angle of the garden of West Cheam Manor House.
The Market House is one of the finest in Gloucestershire, and dates from 1655.
Having for some years partly been occupied by an army college, it is now a private house, the home of William Parente, Prince of Castel Viscardo, a grandson of the 7th Duke of Portland.
The village stocks still survive near the church, and so does the pigeon-house to Amwellbury.
One such attack was made against Lydney, where Sir John Winter, Royalist commander in the Forest of Dean, lived in the heavily fortified White House.
Car drivers using the shop, post box or phone (on the left) must have caused an obstruction on this narrow part of the main road, and since this photograph was taken, the house on the right was demolished
A red brick village, it has a number of good vernacular houses. Those in the photograph demonstrate the restrained quality of its late Georgian
Turton Tower is basically two buildings, a pele tower dating from the 1100s, modernised around 1450, and a farm house or family hall, added in the late 14th century.
This view is now marred, to put it mildly, by the concrete eyesore of the Moat House Hotel, 14 storeys of 1960s aggression: but there are good views from the rooms, no doubt.
Apart from the White Horse, little on the right side of Shortmead Street survives.
Now swamped by housing estates, the High Street was mainly pedestrianised. However, a substantial amount was demolished, and more is soon to go at the south end.
Here we see a chair mender squatting in the passage outside the kitchen of a London house. There were once 2,500 cabinet making shops in London, many employing children.
Here we see a chair mender squatting in the passage outside the kitchen of a London house. There were once 2,500 cabinet making shops in London, many employing children.
Later the Town Library, belonging to the Corporation - formed in the 17th and 18th centuries - was housed here.
The Lighthouse was built by Trinity House on Anvil Point between 1880 and 1882, to fill the perilous gap between the rocks on Portland and the next cluster around the Isle of Wight.
Miss Moxon would entertain Sunday schools from the Manchester slums in her garden at West Bank, and in the Second World War would always open her house to the evacuees no one else wanted.
The view looks westwards from the foothills of Ridge Cliff to Seatown hamlet (centre left) and Mill House and Mill Lane (lower right), which was concrete-covered in the Second World War to enable the large-scale
It opened in 1884, and Dormans Park was laid out with houses in treed plots - the roads are still gravelled.
The building still houses a shop, the Village Stores and Post Office, but the pillar box (in use in this view) has been moved to the right-hand side of the shop front.
Harvey's is now House of Fraser with a large modern addition fronting North Street, and the restaurant is now French and classier, but at least this archetypal 1950s-designed roof garden is intact.
Places (80)
Photos (7776)
Memories (10360)
Books (1)
Maps (370)

