Maps

658 maps found.

1895, Chownes Mead Ref. RNE668248
1940, Mead End Ref. NPO775954
1946, Mill Meads Ref. NPO780371
1897, Port Mead Ref. RNE809369
1896, Mead Vale Ref. RNE775965
1895, Mead Vale Ref. HOSM65727
1897-1899, Mead End Ref. RNC775953
1920, Coles Meads Ref. POP675314
1919, Mead End Ref. POP775952
1919, Mead End Ref. POP775954
1920, Mill Meads Ref. POP780371
1947, Abbot's Meads Ref. NPO618497
1940, Mead End Ref. NPO775952
1946, Nazeing Mead Ref. NPO788074
1899, Rushey Mead Ref. RNE822895
1896, Abbot's Meads Ref. RNE618497
1896, Mill Meads Ref. RNE780371
1898-1909, Mead Vale Ref. RNC775965
1898-1899, Old Mead Ref. RNC796909
1902-1903, Rushey Mead Ref. RNC822895

Books

3 books found. Showing results 73 to 3.

Memories

579 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.

Woodlands Holiday Camp Swimming Pool

I was brought up in Kemsing at the foot of the Downs and we children would walk up to Woodlands Holiday Camp to swim for a shilling or so. On a fine weekend you could take your swimming things and some ...Read more

A memory of Sevenoaks in 1960 by Philip Dew

Wyke Regis

My wife Christina Armstrong's (nee Brown) mum Phylis was born and raised in Wyke Regis, both of Phylis's parents along with many of her relatives are buried at this church. Chris's mum was raised at Park Mead Road, her name was Phylis ...Read more

A memory of Wyke Regis by Robert Armstrong

Happy Days

Oh the memories stored away!! Charlie's opposite Cove Green, going there for sweeties on a Sunday, Cove Green (not as good as Tower Hill swings though!), Mundays closing at 1pm on Sundays, Thorntons with its yellow facade, and wool etc, I ...Read more

A memory of Cove in 1965 by Ann Mozdzer

Ancestral Home

With my newly obtained lawyer´s degree and after joining a British bank based in Buenos Aires, Argentina, I was sent to London, to follow an international training course of one year, along with my wife Rosemarie and our one year ...Read more

A memory of Car Colston in 1972 by Enrique Martin

Happy Days In Latimer

It was only two years or so, from 1959-61, aged 6-8, but it still seems as if the happiest period of my childhood in Latimer was one long, endless, glorious summer. My dad was in the army, in the King's Own Scottish Borderers, ...Read more

A memory of Latimer in 1959 by John Sayer

Great Memories Of This Area

Really it was 1961-66. I worked as a Geologist for the United Steel Companies based in Rotherham. I visited Haile Moor and Beckermet Mines every two or three weeks for 5 years and came to love the area and its people ...Read more

A memory of Thornhill in 1961 by Geoff Potts

Odeon Pictures

After the war I used to go to the Salvation Army flicks, almost next to the Odeon. They were free on sat ams I believe. I lived at 191 Gillingham Road till 1955,then went to Canada. Memories of Kerridges, Livingstone Circus, Darland ...Read more

A memory of Gillingham in 1950 by Raymond Knights

A Life In Consett

I was born in Consett in 1951 and spent all of my life here, I can remember lots of things mentioned in previous letters especially the Rex, I spent lots of Saturday mornings there, also Rossi's and Dyambro's on Saturday afternoons, ...Read more

A memory of Consett in 1951 by John Cook

White Tomkins & Courage

In the 1960s I used to hurry down Nutley Lane each morning to my job as telephonist at WTC, which was situated a few road away at the distal end of Nutley Lane and has long since disappeared. WTC was a thriving, example of local ...Read more

A memory of Reigate in 1963

I Meet A Vagrant I Know

September 1958 I meet a vagrant I knew. In 1957, I was appointed to be Village Constable, at Lower Penn, Wolverhampton, an upper class district of wolverhampton. My station, was in Springhill Park. The beat was divided ...Read more

A memory of Stramshall in 1958 by John Mellor

Captions

156 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.

Caption For London, Ludgate Hill And Circus 1897

The quagmire became so impassable that a new wooden roadway had to be added.

Caption For Wigan, Standishgate C1950

Sir William had been away for several years and was thought to be dead, so she married a Welsh knight. Then Sir William came home.

Caption For London, Stock Exchange Celebrating The Relief Of Mafeking 1900

The country was gripped by news from the Boer War, and the public reaction to the news caused a new word to be added to the vocabulary, to 'maffick', or celebrate wildly.

Caption For Newbury, St Nicolas' Church C1955

A large crowd gathers here every November for the Remembrance Day service to commemorate the dead of two World Wars.

Caption For Inverlochy, Castle C1890

The Covenanter field commander Sir Duncan Campbell of Auchinbreck was among the dead, though his superior, the Duke of Argyll, had seen fit to remain upon his galley in the loch during the whole proceedings

Caption For Barrow In Furness, Walney Bridge 1908

Here, Walney Bridge is still under construction: work is being done on the opening section bascules, and the parapets have still to be added. In the background are the steelworks at Hindpool.

Caption For Hemingford Grey, The River C1960

There is a warning to go dead slow as they pass the boat house.

Caption For Fernworthy, The Sacred Circle 1907

It is probable, given the number of stone circles found on Dartmoor, that a family or a group of families erected them for ritual worship, either to venerate the dead or for an astronomical purpose.

Caption For Froxfield Green, The Lychgate And War Memorial C1965

An inscription on the memorial says 'Sons of this place let this of you be said that you who live are worthy of your dead.'

Caption For Worcester, The Cathedral, Rising From The Dead 1907

Those on the south wall feature scenes from Judgement Day, including these three members of the faithful pushing up their coffin lids as they rise from the dead.

Caption For Cowes, The Parade C1871

This is a very peaceful scene for these waters, with an uncharacteristically dead calm sea at high tide.

Caption For New Brighton, Pier 1900

They would try to peddle such things as rock, drinks, postcards, paper windmills, shells, beads and flowers. A group of such ladies can be seen here seated on the promenade (left).

Caption For Hitchin, Brand Street C1955

Indeed, the story is told that the road was so bad that one of the potholes was filled with a fully harnessed dead cart-horse.

Caption For Avebury, The Avenue C1955

Along this sacred avenue dead bodies were probably carried to the temple of Avebury.

Caption For Lichfield, The Cathedral, The West Front 1887

He was shot dead later that day. The garrison surrendered three days later, and were allowed to leave.

Caption For Keynsham, High Street 1950

The town's answer was to shoot the messenger dead.

Caption For Aysgarth, The Village And War Memorial C1955

The war memorial honouring the dead of the two World Wars is seen here in the centre.

Caption For St Neots, The Boatyard C1960

It was, then, a sombre community that welcomed the end of the war and gave lavishly to provide memorials to the dead.

Caption For Bamford, Church 1919

It is probably most famous for the fact that the dead from the drowned village of Derwent were re-interred in its churchyard after the construction of the Ladybower Dam during the Second World War.

Caption For Abingdon, The Queen's Hotel C1955

Everything from the left of the view as far right as the brick building with the dormer was demolished in the 1960s to make way for the deadly Bury Street shopping precinct, which opened in

Caption For Swindon, The Goddard Arms, High Street C1950

In April 1914, Francis Priscilla Hunter, aged 23, a between-maid here, was shot dead by her jealous lover, Walter James White. He was executed for the murder at Winchester in June 1914.

Caption For Ogmore By Sea, Dunraven Bay And Castle 1936

It was a usual custom amongst wreckers to kill any sailors who had survived the wrecking; after all, dead men tell no tales.

Caption For Wick, Inner Court, St Donats Castle C1960

The young man's body was brought back to St Donat's, where it lay in state in the great gallery, looked down upon by the portraits of his equally dead ancestors.

Caption For Formby, Gores Lane C1960

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.