Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Pentre-cwrt, Dyfed
- Pentre Halkyn, Clwyd
- Pentre, Mid Glamorgan
- Ton Pentre, Mid Glamorgan
- Pentre, Powys (near Llangynog)
- Pentre, Powys (near Guilsfield)
- Pentre, Powys (near Bishop's Castle)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Mold)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Ruabon)
- Pentre, Shropshire (near Chirk)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Hawarden)
- Pentre, Dyfed (near Pontyates)
- Pentre, Powys (near Newtown)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Chirk)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Ruthin)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Mold)
- Pentre, Shropshire (near Oswestry)
- Pentre, Powys (near Welshpool)
- Pentre, Clwyd (near Mold)
- Pentre, Shropshire (near Forton)
- Burntwood Pentre, Clwyd
- Pentre Berw, Gwynedd
- Pentre Hodre, Shropshire
- Pentre Llanrhaeadr, Clwyd
- Pentre-celyn, Clwyd
- Pentre Broughton, Clwyd
- Pentre Gwynfryn, Gwynedd
- Pentre Maelor, Clwyd
- Pentre-clawdd, Shropshire
- Pentre Galar, Dyfed
- Pentre Llifior, Powys
- Pentre-cefn, Shropshire
- Pentre-Gwenlais, Dyfed
- Pentre-Poeth, Dyfed
- Pentre Cilgwyn, Clwyd
- Pentre Morgan, Dyfed
Photos
98 photos found. Showing results 781 to 98.
Maps
316 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 937 to 2.
Memories
1,250 memories found. Showing results 391 to 400.
A Bevin Boy
I was called up under the Bevin Scheme in April, 1944, and after a rather indifferent training at Annfield Plain Training Centre, was sent to the Hobson, as I was staying at the time in lodgings in Burnopfield with a Mrs. Crisp, ...Read more
A memory of Burnopfield in 1944 by
Westgate On Sea Holidays In The 1960s
My parents took myself and my late brother to Westgate on Sea almost every Easter from 1959 to 1971. Living in west London we caught the 2.40pm train from Victoria, arriving at Westgate on Sea about ...Read more
A memory of Westgate on Sea by
A Walk From Shotgate Baptist Church To The Nevendon Road Part 2 See Part 1 Below
Continued from Part 1 below. Next to Martins Bank was a record shop, where I remember going with my parents and standing listening to records in the small listening ...Read more
A memory of Wickford by
Growing Up At Newton Poppleford
I was born in London, moved to Oak Tree Villas at Newton Poppleford in Devon at 9 months. Jean Bastin lived on one side and Brian Pring on the other, with Mrs Harrison the church organist in the fourth house, ...Read more
A memory of Newton Poppleford in 1930 by
Bristol's Loveliest Church, St Mary Redcliffe.
St Mary Redcliffe Church. Bristol's loveliest church, St Mary Redcliffe, was described as 'the fairest, the goodliest and most famous parish church in England' by Queen Elizabeth I in 1574. Thanks to ...Read more
A memory of Bristol in 1880 by
Broadmead The Horsefair Bristol Bs1
This 1960s photograph of Bristol's Horsefair in Broadmead shows the two swish large department stores of Lewis's (far right of photo) and and its huge neighbour Jones. (Lewis's now John Lewis no connection and ...Read more
A memory of Bristol in 1953 by
Raf Bletchley Bucks In The 1950s
I was stationed at Raf Bletchley 1950-1953 and wonder if anyone out there had a similar exdperience. At that time Bletchley was a signals station with most of the occupants working at RAF Stanbridge but having ...Read more
A memory of Bletchley by
The Old Workhouse
I lived very happily in the centre portion of the old workhouse,but unfortunately my cat was killed by a neighbouring greyhound. So, I have happy and sad memories of Ackenthwaite
A memory of Ackenthwaite in 1998 by
The Roundway I Remember
In 1954 Roundway was the site of the Royal Army Pay Corps Training Centre. Nothing now remains of this except a plaque erected by the local council to commemorate the fact that thousands of young men conscripted for National ...Read more
A memory of Roundway in 1954 by
My Time Here
I know my memory wasn't long ago but I love the fact that this school is still standing. I went there in 1998 and left in 2002. I was in the Angles House and we won every music interhouse competition going. I miss my time there soooo ...Read more
A memory of Redditch in 1998 by
Captions
3,594 captions found. Showing results 937 to 960.
There are two trains in the station, one barely visible in the background (centre left).
of the cliff top have decorative balconies overlooking the sea.There was no problem with parking at this time, in what is now a very busy area, within walking distance of the main shopping centre
Left of centre is the sprawling old house called Stagbury, a late 18th-century house demolished in the 1970s.
The bold black-and-white half-timbering of G Sedgwick's draper and outfitters shop in the centre of the picture (the owners are proudly standing outside) is in marked contrast to the same shop which
This was taken from the slope below Newfoundland Coppice, looking south-eastwards to Eype Down (centre), with Doghouse Farm in the dip below (right).
The old Mill House (centre) was demolished in 1966.
Notice the steeple of St Paul's Church in the distance (centre) – it was taken down soon after the bus station opened.
From Saxon times Feckenham was the administrative centre for the Forest of Feckenham, which once covered most of north Worcestershire.
Originally one of the largest country houses in the town of Cheshunt, Grundy Park is now home to one of the Borough of Broxbourne's leisure centres.
Today this scene has changed very little, although Austin the gunsmith's (left), and the pastrycook's shop (centre) have changed hands many times over the years.
They may, of course, be waiting for the New Inn (centre) to open its doors and provide them with the chance to discuss how the coastal area was rapidly turning into a prime tourist spot.
It is often said to have been founded by Lady Godiva, but Meriden's main claim to fame is the ancient cross on the village green reputed to mark the centre of England.
On the left are convalescent cotton mill workers; but as mills closed all over Lancashire, the building closed as a convalescent home and was bought by Wyre Borough Council to be their Civic Centre—it
The centre of Garstang has been spared the worst ravages of modern development and, although generally now more busy than depicted here, remains largely unchanged.
But in the 16th century, Alford was also a major glass-making centre.
Outside the Sir Charles Napier public house stands a telephone box (centre right).
To the west the Melton Mowbray road reaches the town centre via Westgate, a wide street seen here looking north-east towards Market Place.
Here we see the 19th-century cottages of the village; the older part is well inland, and the newer development stretches from the old centre towards the sea.
Although it is as well-designed as a high rise building can be in a small-scale setting, the twelve-storey Civic Centre lurks menacingly just round the corner in Silver Street.
Built in 1782 to designs by Thomas Baldwin, Somersetshire Buildings remain the most elegant and ornate in the street; the bowed centre house is a total contrast to the regular flat fronts of the other
Barrel Rock (centre right, with the marker post) marks the end of Bude's breakwater.
The chapel survived, and later became a community centre in the new housing estate at St Katherine's Way.
The Athenaeum (centre), which was re-fronted in 1802-04, has a Victorian observatory on the roof.
Of the two pubs shown here, The New Red Lion (centre) survives.
Places (57)
Photos (98)
Memories (1250)
Books (2)
Maps (316)