Places
3 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
1,193 photos found. Showing results 481 to 500.
Maps
27 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 577 to 2.
Memories
488 memories found. Showing results 241 to 250.
Leaving School
So! Back to 11 Woburn Place, back to school on Hope Chapel Hill back to Hotwells golden mile with its 15 pubs. The War was still going on but there was only limited bombing and some daylight raids, the city was in a dreadful state ...Read more
A memory of Bristol in 1945 by
Floods On High St/ Bridge St Corner
Until the current concrete flood walls and steel piles that line the banks of the Fossdyke Canal were installed in the mid-1960s, this area of the village regularly flooded during the autumn and winter months. Lots ...Read more
A memory of Saxilby in 1965
Childhood Memories
I was born in Calverley in 1948. I lived with my mother, father and brother (Ernest). I attended Calverley Church School. I played down in the woods most of the time, with my brother and our friends. My brother was a bully with ...Read more
A memory of Calverley in 1956 by
My Home Town 1947 1969
I was born in Liebenrood Road Maternity Hospital Reading in 1947 and for my first 5 years I lived in Salisbury Road, moving to Whitley until I left in 1969. I remember as a young child having many photographs taken at Jeromes ...Read more
A memory of Reading by
My Very Happy Childhood In New Haw Road!!!
We originally moved in 1957 when I was 5 from Thornton Heath in Surrey to Burleigh Road in Addlestone because my dad had started working for Peto Scott (TV makers) near Weybridge. Then in December 1957 my ...Read more
A memory of New Haw in 1962 by
Living At Blaen Y Pant
My father built most of the houses on Blaen-y-Pant, including our house, Bryn Dene. Initially there were houses built in 1937 on the Avenue, the Place and the Crescent. It was a private development of good quality homes. ...Read more
A memory of Blaen-y-cwm in 1947 by
Velmead Farm,Watery Lane
My Father was cowman on this farm, we lived in the tythe cottage for about 6 years and I started school there. My teacher was Mrs War, her husband was the foreman of Velmead farm. We walked across the fields to ...Read more
A memory of Church Crookham in 1943 by
1907 1965 Family Sussex Street Caroline St St Peters
Four Generations of Bowrings! Hazel Bowring - In 1958 I was born in Salford, sister of Michael Bowring. I was born at 146 Sussex Street in 1958, my parents were Kenneth Thomas & Rita Patricia ...Read more
A memory of Salford in 1950 by
Romantic Stroll With Dd
Ahh, I rememeber it well, strolling down past the church towards home with DD, you see my wife was away and I couldn't help myself. 36 years of wedded bliss up in smoke. Little walks by the canal and kissing on the beach ...Read more
A memory of New Hutton in 2010 by
Memories Of Playing On The
I used to live on "ALICE" the narrow boat in the canal basin on Harry Machins boatyard. Great memories of playing on the "ACKY" with my best mate Jackie Hickman who lived at Wharfedale Cottages on Betton Road with ...Read more
A memory of Market Drayton in 1968 by
Captions
720 captions found. Showing results 577 to 600.
The bridge in our picture was erected when the river was diverted to form part of the Ship Canal in 1894.
Our photographer is standing on the bridge over the lock which separates the dock from the Lancaster Canal basin.
The Kennet & Avon was a working canal when this picture was taken. Today, the only boats you will see are recreational ones.
This is probably the longest-lived operational horse-drawn trip boat on the canal system.
New Canal street commemorates one of the many open waterways which ran through the medieval streets until the 19th century.
The Leeds/Liverpool Canal and the railway both increased access to new markets across the Pennines and down to the south.
The two Bittell Reservoirs, the Worcester and Birmingham Canal and some pleasant countryside are all just a short stroll away for the lane`s residents.
This development, of course, meant the demise of the canals.
A ditch ran alongside the building until the 1850s, which was intended to link Southampton with the Andover Canal and the River Test.
In the first year of operation, goods weighing 76,000 tons were carried on the canal. Salt is still mined here from huge underground caves.
There were two canal and tunnel systems, one set higher than the other. Linked by an inclined plane on a 1 in 4 gradient, the boats were carried between levels on a rail-mounted cradle.
At the time this photograph was taken, Ulverston was still a busy commercial port linked to the River Leven by the Ulverston Canal.
This village is less well known than the prodigious Grand Junction Canal tunnel that emerges just to the south.
The Red Lion Inn shown here at the centre of the picture survives where others, such as the Bell (on the left) have not; public houses sprang up alongside the canal route which opened to great national
The Chesterfield Canal begins at the distant hump-backed bridge beyond a moored motor cruiser. The 'Trent Valley Way' long-distance footpath stretches from here to beyond Nottingham.
The canal was closed, except for the Bude section, in 1891.
The village of Braunston lies on a hill overlooking a picturesque stretch of the Grand Union Canal, one of Britain's most famous inland waterways.
This is where the Worcester and Birmingham Canal was joined to the River Severn in 1815.
Sited beside the main north road, the pub has always been a busy place, with the canal and, later, the railway also bringing their trade. The former nearby station took the name of Roebuck.
Carnforth's industries of sand and gravel extraction and iron smelting depended upon the Lancaster Canal and later the railway, when an important junction between the north-south and east-west
The intended junction for the Staffs & Worcs Canal and the River Severn was to have been at Bewdley, but the locals objected.
Just a few minutes walk from here, the Leeds & Liverpool Canal links up with the River Aire and the Aire & Calder Navigation, providing Leeds with an inland waterway from the Mersey to the Humber
In the early 19th century, the colliery at Brereton nearby was connected by rail to a wharf, which enabled coal to be transported along the Trent and Mersey canal.
Bypassed by the Bridgewater canal, the cobbled village centre has retained much of its quaint atmosphere. Perhaps Frith's photographer sought refreshment at the imposing sandstone Ram's Head Hotel.
Places (3)
Photos (1193)
Memories (488)
Books (2)
Maps (27)