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Memories
22,900 memories found. Showing results 2,801 to 2,810.
Trenchers Restaraunt
On Saturday evening, I set off for Whitby on the bus and arrived there for 6;30 pm. On arriving, I thought of asking the bus driver what was the last bus back to Middlsbro, but then thought there was not much point as I was only ...Read more
A memory of Whitby in 2012 by
Mains Of Templand
My mother, May Mallarkey was housekeeper at the farm around 1935/36. The owners, were the Hay family. A particular memory of that period was the big tree, (at least it looked big to me as I was only three or four ...Read more
A memory of Kirkton of Auchterless in 1930 by
Brady's Square
I lived and went to Biddick Junior School, very close to here. I believed at the time, it was Brady Square (not Brady's) but learned later that it was named Brady's Square because the newsagent's shop there was originally 'Brady's'.
A memory of Washington in 1950 by
My Life In 1955 In The Manor House Coln St Aldwyns
In 1955, my mother was hired as a housekeeper for Mrs Pam Spanogh, a polio victim in a wheelchair. It was for me, a five year old, the most idyllic time of my life and my memories of this ...Read more
A memory of Coln St Aldwyns in 1955 by
Good Old Days In Salford
I was born in Salford, one of six children to Edith Casey and Ken Casey, their other children consisted of Linda, Alan, Barry, Ken, Paul and of course myself. We lived at number 50 Bury Street which was off Ellor Street. My ...Read more
A memory of Salford in 1955 by
My Early Days At Longmoor
I was born at the Louise Margaret Hospital at Aldershot while my father was RSM at Longmoor, then of course the home of the well known Longmoor Military Railway. I was christened at the St Martin's Garrison Church. ...Read more
A memory of Longmoor Camp by
Halton Village
I arrived in Halton in 1957 age 6 .My memories are the shops and pubs in Halton. Harold fish shop was the most popular fish shop in Halton. There was Halton Institute where I went to dancing class, Miss Fraser ran it - she ...Read more
A memory of Halton in 1960 by
Life In Silverdale 1946 T0 1949
I moved to Silverdale from Bradford in 1945/6 at the end of the war, with my father, Leslie Waddington, and my grandmother Mary Waddington. We bought Swiss Cottages down Townsfield from Tommy Taylor the joiner for ...Read more
A memory of Silverdale by
Raf Herscha Hill
I, along with two others at any one time, was posted to the RAF fixer station on Herscha Hill. We stayed with Miss Bella Scott at a house called Noranside, halfway up Kintore Street. I was there from 2 Feb 1954 to mid-November ...Read more
A memory of Auchenblae in 1954 by
Midfield Way
We lived at 24 Midfield Way from 1940 until 1950, when we moved to Sidcup. When I was a boy we used to catch great crested newts in the pond at Greys Farm, and scrump apples around the back, from the orchard. I watched the country ...Read more
A memory of St Paul's Cray in 1940 by
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 6,721 to 6,744.
The buildings here have not changed much, although the garage on the right is no longer there. There is a Maserati car dealership at the end of the High Street.
The 14th-century Mint House, on the left, was once the home of Andrew Borde - 'merry Andrew' - a former Carthusian Friar, and court physician to Henry VIII.
The Old Plough was opposite but closed in 1948, the licence being transferred to the 'new' Plough.
Shoppers on Newgate Street in 1923 were seeing prices slowly returning their pre-war levels.
Gradually absorbed to become a suburb of Tunbridge Wells over the first half of the 20th century, this section of village shops and businesses along the main highway running between London and Eastbourne
Built-in bathrooms for most people were still something of a novelty.
In the 1890s there were several tramway schemes to link Southport to Lytham St Anne's, though the real fly in the ointment was bridging the River Ribble.
All long piers such as those at Southport, Ramsey in the Isle of Man, and Southend, were equipped with tramways, though the original idea behind them was for the conveyance of passengers, baggage
Northenden Road was one of Sale's main streets for shops, along with Chapel Road, School Road and Washway Road.
Tower Bridge has become a virtual symbol of London, and it is certainly a very striking and remarkable structure.
One of the attractions at Embleton is its golf course, once only 9 holes but now the full 18.
By the 20th century, Goudhurst has quietened down considerably compared to earlier times, when the iron smelting and cloth making industries were at their peak.
The great house was New Place; it has now been converted into cottages. It was the home of the Palmer family in the time of Henry VIII. Ecclesden Manor is a long, low Tudor-style house built in 1634.
There was an initial problem, in that the law in Ireland dealing with such things did not allow the necessary action, so this had to be attended to.
Lord Donegall was quite willing, since he had just built the new Belfast Castle on the Antrim side of the town.
On the left, above the fourth sunblind, is a plaque informing the passer-by that Thomas Hardy was apprenticed here in 1856.
Situated 4.5 miles south of Birmingham, Bournville was chosen by George Cadbury in 1879 as the site for his new factory and for a model village for his workers.
Next to the circle is the railed King Stone, badly deformed by weather and people. The railings do little to enhance its setting.
Roath Park was laid out in 1894 at a cost of £62,000 - a considerable sum in those days. The land, 132 acres, was presented to the city by Lord Bute.
One of Anglesey's best-known sailing resorts, at the eastern end of the Menai Strait, Beaumaris was founded by Edward I, who built one of his great castles here, although it was never finished.
This was the scene of the Rebecca Riots in the 19th century, when local farmers and workers, protesting against the high level of tolls, disguised themselves in women's clothing and tore down the tollgates
The village had once been a centre for lead-mining, but by 1900 it was once again reliant upon agriculture, though there was still some quarrying carried out in the locality.
The Monmouthshire Canal ran from Newport to Pontymoile, with a branch to Crumlin. Allt-yr-yn is the name of the hill in the distance.
At this time Warburton was a small village on the south bank of the Mersey, five miles west of Altrincham and twelve miles from Manchester.
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