Places
10 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,534 photos found. Showing results 781 to 800.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
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Memories
8,173 memories found. Showing results 391 to 400.
Society Farm
In 2001 my husband Derek and I visited Assington. We had been researching Derek's family history, and had discovered that his great-great-grandfather John Crisell was the bailiff, in the middle of the 19th century, at Society Farm, ...Read more
A memory of Assington in 2001 by
Greenham's The Butchers & Brewer's The Grocers
In 1954, as a 17 year old cashier bookkeeper, I started work for Mr Greenham, whose butcher's shop was near the top of Broad Street. Some years later (in 1958), I went to work at Brewer's, the grocers, ...Read more
A memory of Lyme Regis in 1954 by
Memories Of Life
I was born in 1942 and spent my childhood years living in the Way Road area of the city. My brother and I were lucky enough to have a family living directly behind us in Homefield Avenue (I think that is what it was called) - there ...Read more
A memory of Leicester by
Meadvale As A Living Village
When we first moved to "the estate" in the early fifties I would have to catch the bus into Reigate as I went to school in Holmesdale Road. The school I have forgotten about but what is memorable was the smell of the fresh ...Read more
A memory of Reigate in 1957 by
Barry Island In The 50s And 60s
I traveled to Barry Island every summer because it was the nearest seaside to Brynmawr where we lived. The excitement of seeing the sea was overwhelming, and every time I would be sick on the old coach taking us ...Read more
A memory of Barry Island in 1953 by
Childhood Memories
This is the street where I was born in 1940, our house is just out of sight, but when I left school in 1955 I worked for a short while in the shop adjoining the post office. Sadly my father, who was in the Army, was posted to ...Read more
A memory of Sandhurst in 1955 by
Boring History!
I attended Storrington Primary School in Spierbridge Road, and we all looked forward to our last year at the school, because during the summer seniors were taken to Church Street as part of a local history lesson. Of course, we all ...Read more
A memory of Storrington in 1989 by
Charles Arthur Samphier Born12 5 1937 Wyatts Green
My parents bought Wyatts Stores in about 1936 and moved from West Ham, E.London., with my two sisters. Dad kept about 300 chickens in the back field. I was born on Coronation Day at Wyatts Stores ...Read more
A memory of Doddinghurst in 1930 by
Autumn Walk
I moved into West Park Road ( seen in the photo off to the left ) in 1955 at the age of 7. The house was a glorious Victorian residence with 1881 as the year of build noted on the front. Childhood was bliss here, particularly living in ...Read more
A memory of Mottingham in 1959 by
Born Here And Still Live Here
i was born in late 1949 in sugley street and currently live in the street directly opposite rokeby street with the school in the middle my name i s geoffrey watson although my surname was changed from hudspith when i was ...Read more
A memory of Lemington by
Captions
3,478 captions found. Showing results 937 to 960.
The company had around sixteen stores throughout Cheshire, and also operated a fleet of mobile shops which toured the rural areas.
They remain virtually unchanged, but away to the left is now the Castle Mall shopping centre.
This busy shopping street has buildings of human scale of the 1920s and 30s, with a prominent well-designed Midland Bank sign now replaced by the anonymous HSBC of the Eastern Banking Empire.
To the left of the war memorial is Boots the Chemist, with its old-fashioned shop frontage. It is no longer on this site.
The billboard that was above the shop has been removed.
The huge advertising signs above the grocer's and shoe shop would not be allowed today.
The Apothecary's and Shetland Wool shops look most inviting, with their charming windows.
This is the town's main shopping street. Lower down, a canopy over the pavement keeps the Pennine precipitation off the shoppers.
Elcock's, the little newsagent and tobacconist almost hidden behind a forest of newspaper signs and placards, has been replaced by a beauty therapist, and most of the shops either side of the Bugle Inn
The brash sixties shopping precinct is overlooked by its nine-storey block of flats (with some evidently still awaiting occupation according to the sign); the tower of St Paul's Church rises among the
many other towns, the centre of Solihull was redeveloped in the 1960s.Among the projects was a new civic centre designed by H Weedon & Partners, and the demolition of Drury Lane for a pedestrian shopping
Bembridge's shops have always been functional, serving the simple needs of residents and tourists alike.
The shop is now a private house.
Across the road is the baker's shop with a Hovis sign outside.
The middle section of well-remembered shops has now been replaced with department stores. The essence of a modern commercial centre is evident. Parking is at a premium, and it's not even market day!
Winchester's High Street boasts a variety of Georgian, Victorian and half-timbered Elizabethan buildings; some of them still have their original shop fronts and doorways.
Virtually every shop in the picture has since either moved elsewhere in the city centre or closed down altogether: Marks and Spencer moved to New Canal, and Woolworths to the High Street.
The block of 41 shops facing Market Square was the first to be built. The butcher's, nearest the camera, is certainly attracting window-shoppers. Just to its left is a cafeteria.
The firm's other shop on the Cheapside and George Street junction was also demolished during massive retail redevelopment in the 1970s.
On the left-hand edge of photograph H252061 (page left) we see the shop George Hilton & Sons, which was built in 1932 and designed by Harold Turner (a local architect whom we will meet elsewhere
Shops are still thriving, and one tradesman reckons to sell everything that might be bought in a general ironmonger's.
Note the blinds on the shop windows and the attraction they hold for small boys.
It now forms a centrepiece to this busy market town, familiar to the many local people who come to shop each week from dozens of surrounding towns and villages.
In its shopping centre the Neo-Georgian block on the left contrasts with the half-timbering of Burkes Parade, but all good quality work of the 1920s.
Places (10)
Photos (2534)
Memories (8173)
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Maps (71)