Places
23 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Mead Vale, Surrey
- Meads, Sussex
- Wall Mead, Avon
- Mead, Devon (near Morwenstow)
- Mead, Devon (near Ashburton)
- Abbot's Meads, Cheshire
- Thicket Mead, Avon
- Chownes Mead, Sussex
- Chertsey Meads, Surrey
- Mead End, Wiltshire
- Nazeing Mead, Essex
- Rushey Mead, Leicestershire
- Teasley Mead, Sussex
- Coles Meads, Surrey
- Abbey Mead, Surrey
- Ilchester Mead, Somerset
- Old Mead, Essex
- Port Mead, West Glamorgan
- Mill Meads, Greater London
- Bushey Mead, Greater London
- White Ox Mead, Avon
- Mead End, Hampshire (near Lymington)
- Mead End, Hampshire (near Horndean)
Photos
75 photos found. Showing results 41 to 60.
Maps
658 maps found.
Books
3 books found. Showing results 49 to 3.
Memories
579 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Growing Up In Edgware
I was actually born in Bushey but I grew up in Edgware. I always thought it a funny little town but in it's own way it was beautiful. The parks were beautiful and always had Rose Gardens and ponds to visit. Walking was a way of ...Read more
A memory of Edgware in 1961 by
My Childhood In Southall
My parents were born in India. My grandfather settled in Africa and had a good job. When my father got married he stayed Africa where all my brothers and sisters were born. My dad was a carpenter by trade; he arrived in ...Read more
A memory of Southall in 1962 by
Daisy Bank School
Daisy Bank, with the lollipop lady always there and ready to tell you off if you were not concentrating on crossing the road. Playing tick and kiss chase in the playground. Looking after my little sister when ...Read more
A memory of Bradley
Isaac Green 1800's
Alas, I have no memories of Camerton. I have never visited this town of my ancestors. I have been to Bath, but at the time never knew of the existence of my family having originated in Camerton. My ...Read more
A memory of Camerton by
The Anastasia Spaceship Ride
I first saw the spaceship ride when I was eight. Myself and two sisters, Audrey and Janet lived at Whitby Road Childrens' Home (formely Whitby Road Union Workhouse). In short, our family had been broken apart by ...Read more
A memory of Scarborough in 1953 by
The Tarry Beck
I remember pulling George Thompson from the beck at high tide. The streets were Prospect Place, Customs Row, Cargo Fleet Lane, South View, Bristol Street, Dover Street, Chester Street, Cambridge Rd and one I don't remember. I lived ...Read more
A memory of Cargo Fleet by
Licensed Game Butcher
Our gt uncle Edward Cope Statham, born in Barrow in Furness, was a licensed game butcher in Longton. He is on the 1901 census, aged 24, as lodging in Trentham Road so don't know if the shop was there too but we do have a photo ...Read more
A memory of Longton in 1900 by
Stubbington House School Teachers
I read with interest Peter Madden's memories. I remember Madden, we were all known by surnames. Just to jog a few more memories, there was Miss Critten's partner Miss Stapleton, they taught the juniors - Donkey ...Read more
A memory of Stubbington by
Early Years In Hindley
What - no memories of Hindley? I was born in 1935 (nee Pennington) at a house in Liverpool Road, just up from the Strangeways Pub (The Paddock). The area was called Navvies' Lump, and although the address was "Liverpool ...Read more
A memory of Hindley in 1930 by
May Be Its Me And My Brother And Mum
I think that that is my mum Gladys Haigh, and my brother Douglas who is 4 years older than me is beside my mum, I'm the one in the pram I think! We were going to meet my dad Jim Haigh, we used to live Main ...Read more
A memory of High Bentham in 1952 by
Captions
156 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
This resulted in the town flooding, leaving 35 people dead.
The impressive war memorial records the names of the dead of both World Wars of the 20th century.
Will's punishment was to be added to the press gang quota.
The roofed building has been replaced by the Ayscoughfee Café, and the gardens include an impressive war memorial to Spalding's dead of both wars.
The barons were destroyed, and both Simon de Montfort and his son were among the dead. Shortly afterwards Henley was sacked and burnt.
Taken from close to the Spaniards pub, this view looks along the dead straight link between North End Way and Hampstead Lane, which is still recognisable.
The road from Great Ellingham to Hingham runs dead straight for over half a mile, an unusual survival of an open-field boundary from the Middle Ages.
Winsford's granite cross commemorates the dead of both World Wars.
The River Sid starts its short journey to the sea amidst the high land at Broad Down and Farway; here the Bronze Age inhabitants of East Devon buried their dead.
It lasted only 15 minutes or so but it left over 50 Parliamentary troopers dead, some of them drowned in the Teme.
The bell on the sign bears the motto 'I call for the living, I toll for the dead, I scatter the lightning'.
The traders' names have now changed, but many are still open fronted and thriving, doubtless awaiting the dead hand of EC regulations to sanitise them.
An old custom at Formby was the carrying of a corpse three times round the Godstone in the belief that it prevented the dead from coming back to haunt their relatives.
The village purchased it in 1223 and immediately miraculous cures began to happen, with dead people being restored to life. The same year Henry III visited the priory and granted the village a fair.
The steps were never heard again after an Elizabethan house was bombed out and a workman found a string of beads.
The Cenotaph replaced a temporary plaster memorial to the dead of the Great War which had been erected on the site for the Victory Parade in 1919.
In 1923 the town commemorated its dead of the Great War by building this fine war memorial. The water pump has gone, and the Norfolk Arms hotel apparently has a side line in motor car repairs.
The names of the 27 people who were killed in the 1941 bombing raid are about to be added to the memorial.
It contained one chamber for the dead and was originally surrounded by a large oval mound; this was last recorded in the 19th century, but has now been obliterated by man and time.
We now know that the area was not dead but merely dormant.
Although our long-dead photographer leaves us with no more information than that given, this is almost certainly another view of the Rogerstone Fourteen locks.
From 1892 this pathway and steps was known locally as 'Dead House Steps'.
To the right of the picture, the present-day clock tower, designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield in 1926, is yet to be added.
In 1170 the four knights who murdered Thomas à Becket in Canterbury Cathedral gathered here before carrying out their deadly deed.
Places (23)
Photos (75)
Memories (579)
Books (3)
Maps (658)