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Maps
7,034 maps found.
Books
163 books found. Showing results 9,001 to 9,024.
Memories
22,902 memories found. Showing results 3,751 to 3,760.
My First Home Of My Own
I MOVED TO STEVENAGE LIKE MOST YOUNG PEOPLE AT THAT TIME TO GET A HOUSE YOU HAD NO CHANCES ELSEWHERE MY BROTHER ALREADY LIVED THERE SO I WAS ABLE TO LODGE WITH HIM GOT A JOB AT BEA SYSTEMS AS AN AID STOREKEEPER HAVING BEEN ...Read more
A memory of Stevenage
Richard Alexander
Richard Alexander was born in Old Newton 1780. He is my great great great grandfather. He was married to Mary Sharman, don't know where she was born but she died in Bacton 1852. I am coming to Earl Stoneham for a week in April ...Read more
A memory of Old Newton by
Little Boys Home South Darenth/1938/War Time
remember being packed off to this boys home, well it was a self contained village really. every amenetie was taken care of church just inside the gates...school,,,,about 8/10 houses..the experience was quite ...Read more
A memory of Bromley by
Doodlebug In Central Avenue
I lived at 6 Camborne Road, Welling with my mother Hermine Wright and my grandparents Fred and Elsie Wright from 1943 to 1948. I attended East Wickham Infants School, where my teacher was Miss Sharp. I think the year must ...Read more
A memory of Welling by
Derwent. Parade
We lived @ 52 Derwent Parade above Harry Fenton's outfitters. Mum work at Phillips sweet shop beside the stairs to the flats above. Other shops included Watts furniture, the Co Op, Woollies and the sensational , or so we thought, ...Read more
A memory of South Ockendon
The Caddick Family
1946 was the year that our family life in Nancledra began. What a relief it must have been to our parents, Peggy and Arthur Caddick to move into Windswept Cottage. The war years in London were over and they both felt a huge sense ...Read more
A memory of Nancledra by
The Ghost On Station Road
I lived at 59 Station Road, Royston. My parents moved there in the very early 1960's and I was born in 1969 and my brother David in 1972. It was a semi, with what seemed to be a garden that went on forever. I was ...Read more
A memory of Royston by
Buckingham Arms
I was 10 when I first stayed. with my parents at the Buckingham Arms in the summer of 1965, we returned again the next year. It was run by Jim & Brenda Horrell and their young son Tony. We were awoken every morning at an unearthly ...Read more
A memory of Taddiport by
Childhood Visit
I have a lasting memory when I was a child probably about 1952 when my parents visited my great uncle Herbert Breed. I think the house that I visited has now gone but I remember it well and I would love to hear from anybody who knew ...Read more
A memory of Eaton Socon by
I Was Born Here In 1946
Not exactly a memory, but I can advise you that I was born at Highfield Maternity Hospital in Highfield Rd on Saturday, 28 September 1946. As the local hospital at Rotherhithe, in London's docklands, had been war-damaged, ...Read more
A memory of West Byfleet by
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 9,001 to 9,024.
The most famous tree of Wyre Forest is perhaps the Whitty Pear, 50ft high, a descendant of the specimen presented by Robert Woodward of Arley Castle.
There was increasing concern over the state of the Mansion, which, despite being a listed building, was allowed to fall into dangerous disrepair.
If you compare this photograph with the reality of the scene today, it would seem at first glance as if time has stood still here.
We are looking at the leeward side from the entrance to the church- yard. Note how many standing headstones there are now, only four years after picture 21072.
This is the village centre, and it holds very special memories for the author.
The shelter of the Barograph Memorial has a pyramidal roof and a wrought iron weather vane.
The George and Dragon is first mentioned as a tavern in the court book of St Albans Abbey in 1279. The half-timbered building dates from the 17th century.
Turning into Dovecote Road we wind half a mile east to the corner of Mill Road to finish this chapter on a literary note.
Seen from the north-west bank of the River Trent, the castle appears foreshortened; but the wall in this view is that half of the east curtain wall that survived the 1650s demolition, with the gatehouse
With the widening of Bridge Street from the 1880s, the old Warrington Academy was again revealed and preserved.
Warrington did once have a horsemarket, but it was further down the road, along Winwick Street outside Central Station.
At the beginning of the 19th century, a number of new streets were built following the grid pattern of the mediaeval town.
This is the village centre, and it holds very special memories for the author.
On the Chelmer & Blackwater Navigation, barges carried timber and coals. The rivers Chelmer and Blackwater meet in Maldon; this cut was built in 1797 to enable ships to reach Chelmsford.
On the Chelmer & Blackwater Navigation, barges carried timber and coals. The rivers Chelmer and Blackwater meet in Maldon; this cut was built in 1797 to enable ships to reach Chelmsford.
Swings, Punch and Judy, and to the left, the Castle Coffee House Refreshment Tent, all served to attract the visitor to this seaside resort.
Swings, Punch and Judy, and to the left, the Castle Coffee House Refreshment Tent, all served to attract the visitor to this seaside resort.
The Carfax 1907 The Carfax and market place is at the heart of the old town.
One of the very finest fortresses in England, Dover Castle dominates the town and harbour below, with the top of the keep standing 465 feet above sea level.
Originally a wooden Saxon fortress built on two islands in a natural moat formed by the river Len, it was transformed into a solid stone castle at the beginning of the 12th century by the Norman baron
The firemen of Dalton were all volunteers. Everyone in Dalton knew when there was a fire, as a siren went off at the fire station to call the volunteers to the engine to set off to fight the fire.
This interesting view was taken from the western side of the river from the site of today's police station, and shows many of the yards along Church Street.
The Druids’ Altar is a naturally large millstone grit formation on the edge of, and overlooking, the Aire valley conurbation, with Bradford to the east and to the west the eastern end of the Yorkshire
The next sequence of views shows the Victorian and later development of Sutton to the south of the railway line.
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