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 41 to 60.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 49 to 1.
Memories
10,360 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Gosh, My Birth Parents' House
My birth parents lived in number 51 Osborne Rd, glad I found a picture of the rd.
A memory of Pontypool in 1968 by
The Bus
My family purchased and converted an old single decker bus for us to have holidays in. It was parked on a small piece of land opposite the church. An old Gypsy caravan was parked just inside the gate to the land, I was told that it had to ...Read more
A memory of Lowsonford by
Evacuees To Normanton In 1941
My elder brother, Alan Crook, and I were evacuated from Sheffield during the blitz of, I think, 1941. We stayed, as far as I can recall, in a large house, I believe the Manse, attached to the ...Read more
A memory of Normanton in 1940 by
Personal Reflections
I was born in Sandleaze, Worton in 1957. I was brought up at 1 Mill Road near the Marston boundary. I remember many things about the village especially the Rose and Crown Pub and the Mill. I remember with pride the war ...Read more
A memory of Worton by
Almondsbury
I know the above scene well! I attended the Knole Park house - now sadly demolished - which was then a boarding school, St. Catherine's. One weekend we went on a day trip to the shore of the Severn.......fascinating place. Would ...Read more
A memory of Almondsbury in 1952 by
Parkstone Girls' Grammar School
This was the entrance to Parkstone Girls' Grammar school where I went from 1956, with Miss Allen as headmistress, until we moved to the present site in Sopers Lane in, I think, 1960 or 61, when these buildings were taken ...Read more
A memory of Poole in 1956 by
Living In Queens Avenue And Going To School
I was three when we moved to Muswell Hill in 1951. My parents had both been in the forces and it was difficult to find accommodation for a family. My grandmother knew a Mr. Wood, he was a judge. His son ...Read more
A memory of Muswell Hill in 1953 by
Miners Strike
My father (Robert Summers born Dec 1916) was 6 months old when his father was killed in Ypers. A few years later my gran remarried a miner, James MacLachlan, an ex Cameronian. My father told me a story of how, during the strike and at ...Read more
A memory of Twechar in 1920 by
The Black And White Cottages
My great grandparents, my nanna (and all of her siblings)and my mother all lived in this house. I'm not sure of the timeframe but it was for a number of years. My mom had many fond memories and stories of the crinkly wall ...Read more
A memory of Easton by
Going To School
This path was a lifeline to me when I was going to school on my bike. As you look at this picture there was houses to the left and Halton Brow and corn fields to the right. I came down this path on my bike and up Boston Avenue to Grange ...Read more
A memory of Halton by
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Captions
6,977 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
The square box of the Co-op building (straight ahead) does not sit well with the older stone houses.
Built on a 1660s terrace, today's Cliveden is a Victorian mansion by Sir Charles Barry, one of the architects of the Houses of Parliament.
Fittleworth is a picturesque village of fine old houses, commons and fir woods. On the left of the picture is the Swan, a 14th-century coaching inn with a sign spanning the main road.
All the familiar seaside fun is here: happy holiday-makers digging in the sand, deckchairs and bathing machines fill this evocative picture of Edwardian Broadstairs.The steps and the lift house are
On the left are RDC houses perhaps built in the 1950s. Further down, a large barn and an old house beyond.
Wyatt clad the brick house in the local hard granite- like Denner Hill Stone and gothicised the house with turrets and battlements.
Centre left at No 33 is the Green Dragon, a cider house, which closed in the late 1960s.
Two fine country houses lie close by.
It was in this house on the left that Jane Austen wrote Mansfield Park, Emma and Persuasion.
Back inthe Chess Valley we reach Latimer, a very pretty village with a triangular green and, uphill to the west, Latimer House.
Many estates of what we now call social housing sprang up around Britain following the war.
Bridge House, the Post Office Stores and the adjoining houses (centre bottom) follow the curve of the street, named after The Swan Inn.
Ray Park Avenue was one of the first roads laid out and has some houses of the 1870s.
West of the church and across a stream is The Bury, the manor house until 1741. At one time council offices, it is now divided into houses and its grounds are a public open space.
To the left are the arched and mullioned windows of the 1661 Almshouses; partly hidden is Ashlar House, which is mid 18th- century and set at the corner of Pound Lane, which leads to the moated Manor
It was once three separate houses, Nos 8,10, and 12 High Street, so there are still three entrances onto the pavement.
Tynevale House was built in 1754, Town Head in 1796, and the Miners Arms in 1750.
The house on the left is still there, but well hidden by trees now. The old coach house selling eggs is now a private house.
The Well House is dated 1642. This view of it is from the footpath passing in front. The cottage behind the house was separated from it in the 1940s or 1950s. It had previously been all one house.
Though called the Count's House, this building is in fact a former summer house dating from about 1820.
In 'Pride and Prejudice' Jane Austen calls Hatfield 'a busy little street that leads to my Lord Salisbury's house'.
This village is noted for its beautiful woods, a railway tunnel under the Balcombe Forest and a brick viaduct over the Ouse valley. The church of St Mary was built in 1847.
Uppingham School's Memorial Hall and classroom block dominate the street, replacing houses which were demolished in the 1920s.
This slightly severe-looking three-storey mansion was built in 1767 on the site of a Benedictine priory, long ruinous and partly converted to a house around 1550.
Places (80)
Photos (7776)
Memories (10360)
Books (1)
Maps (370)

