Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Hook Head, Republic of Ireland
- Trevose Head, Cornwall
- Beachy Head, Sussex
- St Govan's Head, Dyfed
- Gurnard's Head, Cornwall
- Hill Head, Hampshire
- Spurn Head, Yorkshire
- Wasdale Head, Cumbria (near Boot)
- Worms Head, West Glamorgan
- Hengistbury Head, Dorset
- Heads, Strathclyde
- Birches Head, Staffordshire
- Bednall Head, Staffordshire
- Butlane Head, Shropshire
- Chapel Head, Cambridgeshire
- Chinley Head, Derbyshire
- Carroway Head, Staffordshire
- Darley Head, Yorkshire
- Lane Heads, Lancashire
- Seend Head, Wiltshire
- Stag's Head, Devon
- Shawfield Head, Yorkshire
- Flamborough Head, Yorkshire
- Heads Nook, Cumbria
- Hollis Head, Devon
- West Head, Norfolk
- Thames Head, Gloucestershire
- Well Heads, Yorkshire
- Hallam Head, Yorkshire
- Haugh-head, Borders
- Garsdale Head, Cumbria
- Meadow Head, Yorkshire
- Mewith Head, Yorkshire
- Maiden Head, Avon
- Nag's Head, Gloucestershire
- Stags Head, Dyfed
Photos
1,491 photos found. Showing results 801 to 820.
Maps
575 maps found.
Books
3 books found. Showing results 961 to 3.
Memories
2,508 memories found. Showing results 401 to 410.
Brian Tutt
This should be of interest, I hope. I attended Roper Street C of E Primary School from 1944 to1947, Head teacher, Mr Hatt and class teacher Miss Sexton. Brian Tutt was in this class. Sadly he contracted Polio in 1947 and was kept alive in ...Read more
A memory of Eltham in 1940 by
Growing Up In Bradninch
I was born and lived in Bradninch until I went to college when I was 19 in 1969. I was born in the house in Townlands and lived there all the time. After Dad died, Mum moved to Millway Gardens, It was a great place to live ...Read more
A memory of Bradninch by
Seabank Hotel
I worked for 4 years at the Seabank, the memories I have from there are so special. Being snowed in with all the staff, and the New Zealand All Blacks, the parties they held for us that weekend were amazing... Mr. Morris was the ...Read more
A memory of Porthcawl in 1980 by
Distant Memories
I had returned to UK from Queensland to visit my mother who was ill and waiting at the platform entrance at Waterloo station when a former colleague from Post Office Overseas Telegraph came up to me and we began a conversation ...Read more
A memory of Frimley Green in 1978 by
Hotel Manager
My father was also the manager of The Bulls head hotel in the 1950s, Mr Ronald F Williams. At that time Sophia Loren was staying and she joined us for tea as my mother is Italian also, they had a good long chat. I remember sitting ...Read more
A memory of Aylesbury in 1955 by
Snodland School
I was at Holmesdale School from 1952 to 56, then returned in 1960 as head grounds man, when it had a farm run by Mr Baker, nice man. I remember Mr dodd and lots of the old teachers. I married a local girl and still live in Snodland. ...Read more
A memory of Snodland in 1952 by
Continue
A unit of The Army Cadet Force was formed in Farmborough, with headquarters at Bath, about ten or a dozen lads joined. The National Service was then still operating, which us lads expected to be called into, being a cadet would hopefully ...Read more
A memory of Farmborough in 1954 by
Purfleet Primary School
I started at Purfleet Infants & Primary School aged 4, I put my head on the desk and cried for ages, but there was a lovely elderly lady teacher (I can't remember her name?), she blew my nose and washed my face, I'd ...Read more
A memory of Purfleet in 1952 by
Happy Days
This photo shows what was known as the black shed just above the first bridge on the river Gele, to the left of the photo was the school field at the bottom of Berth Glyd where I was born. If you go up Gypsy Lane you will come to an old ...Read more
A memory of Abergele in 1950 by
Staying
My nan and grandfather lived at Lindsay Cottage, Milton Combe. My grandfather was head gardener at Drakes Abbey, a short walk. I stayed with them every year for ten years from 1960. My nan used to send me up for milk at the dairy - I ...Read more
A memory of Milton Combe in 1960 by
Captions
1,136 captions found. Showing results 961 to 984.
Built as a town house for the lead mine-owner Charles Bathurst of Arkengarthdale c1720, its newly-fashionable hand-made bricks, three-storey height and eight bays must then have made it very prominent
The timber market cross dominates the photograph; to its left is the King's Head with its tile hanging and timbering, a finely-detailed town pub of 1899 by Shoebridge and Rising.
This shows the view looking along Reading Road, past the current Post Office and the Shell petrol pump, to the junction with Friday Street and into Duke Street as it heads towards the Market Place.
Sandbanks The Haven Hotel 46102 Standing on the slim, sandy peninsula jutting out from Poole Head, and facing the castle on Brownsea Island, this isolated hotel must have lived up to its
The Boot, the Royal George, the Rose and Crown, the Unicorn, the Bull's Head, the Griffin and the Black Horse were all a part of the Hastings' extensive grip on the town.
Built as a town house for the lead mine-owner Charles Bathurst of Arkengarthdale c1720, its newly-fashionable hand-made bricks, three-storey height and eight bays must then have made it very prominent
Lead mining was a major employer here, but now the stone quarrying is further north, leaving Redmire in peaceful seclusion.
Equally as interesting as the boats are the sheer legs erected on a timber foundation with a runner leading to a hook, and a vertical support on the diagonal, to which is fixed the slewing (or
An iron cage protects the ornate lead pump head.
The late Georgian Saracens Head Hotel beyond stood there until 1959 - it had many wartime RAF connections. Ottakars bookshop is there now.
The late Georgian Saracens Head Hotel beyond stood there until 1959 - it had many wartime RAF connections. Ottakars bookshop is there now.
The second of the Pier Head buildings was the Royal Liver Building. This must be one of the most recognisable buildings in Great Britain.
Victoria Pier used to be known as Crab Head until it was renamed following a visit by Princess Victoria with her mother the Duchess of Kent.
Hundreds of the town's women had donned scarlet clothes in order to look like soldiers, and this bluff, together with the effects of the alcohol, forced the French to surrender.
Whilst a Jaguar 2½ litre heads a row of cars in 1955, only a little boy with a pram uses the road in 1898.
Often referred to as 'the Alpine village' because of its sylvan setting at the head of a wooded valley, the cluster of houses known as Hutton Village dates from the mid 19th century, when Mr Thomas
As queen of the Essex Iceni, she was incensed that the Romans broke her dead husband's treaty.
John Horrocks was a Preston success, and was always held up as a shining example of man's ingenuity. He arrived in Preston in 1791 from Edgworth, near Bolton.
The new building was occupied in the period leading up to the Great War by the Forbes family; Eileen Baillie recalls old Mrs E M Forbes 'lying on an elegant couch ... having her beautiful hair dressed
Also scheduled for redevelopment was the remaining old part of the town between Church Street and the river, which had suffered bomb damage in the war.
from his loved home of Lindisfarne, here, after long wanderings, rests the body of St Cuthbert in whose honour William of St Carileph built this cathedral church, and at his side lies buried the head
The leading two are Wallasey ferries, one probably heading for New Brighton and packed with day trippers for the once-popular resort.
The three-storey building to the left is the Nag's Head Inn, and buildings with the finial on top are the Manor Street School.
The horse-drawn tram heads off towards the Town Hall. The Sudell family can be traced back to the reign of Edward VI. They owned land in Blackburn and out at Oozebooth.
Places (132)
Photos (1491)
Memories (2508)
Books (3)
Maps (575)