Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Holmwood Corner, Surrey
- Newlands Corner, Surrey
- Tattenham Corner, Surrey
- Hawthorn Corner, Kent (near Herne Bay)
- Ashcott Corner, Somerset
- Clopton Corner, Suffolk
- Camp Corner, Oxfordshire
- Duck Corner, Suffolk
- Court Corner, Hampshire
- Crackthorn Corner, Suffolk
- Corner, The, Shropshire
- Dorley's Corner, Suffolk
- Kenton Corner, Suffolk
- Lamb Corner, Essex
- Stafford's Corner, Essex
- Primrose Corner, Norfolk
- Pye Corner, Kent
- Fox Corner, Bedfordshire
- Ganwick Corner, Hertfordshire
- Harman's Corner, Kent
- Narrowgate Corner, Norfolk
- North Corner, Cornwall
- Northmoor Corner, Somerset
- Norton Corner, Norfolk
- Misery Corner, Norfolk
- Birchhall Corner, Essex
- Black Corner, Sussex
- Blackpool Corner, Devon
- Batt's Corner, Hampshire
- Broomer's Corner, Sussex
- Corner Row, Lancashire
- Chequers Corner, Norfolk
- Eckington Corner, Sussex
- Elm Corner, Surrey
- Cripp's Corner, Sussex
- Langley Corner, Buckinghamshire
Photos
1,214 photos found. Showing results 821 to 840.
Maps
599 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
2,797 memories found. Showing results 411 to 420.
Growing Up In Barnes 1950s
We moved to Glebe Road in 1952 (Cousland) and it was a wonderful place for children. We had a back gate opening on to the common and made full use of it. The grass was cut every year and baled for hay and we used to rush out ...Read more
A memory of Barnes by
Lavender Hill
My uncle and aunt had a house in Beaufoy Rd, number 5, tucked into the corner next to the Fish & Chip shop. When I was home on on leave from sea that is where I lived, for about 5 years. Usually up the smoke to the jazz clubs I ...Read more
A memory of Battersea in 1954 by
39londonroad
I was born in Hackbridge in 1944. I lived there until 1953 when my grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins put me on a plane on May 2 to join my father who had emigrated to Canada the year before. My mother, who had lived in ...Read more
A memory of Hackbridge in 1944 by
Busk Crescent
Late in 1945 my parents moved to 25 Busk Crescent, in Cove. The house was on top of a hill and overlooked the Farnborough airfield. From the front bedroom you could see aircraft landing on the runway. The house was one of a string of ...Read more
A memory of Cove in 1945 by
Hipperholme Cross Roads And Lightcliffe
The little 'hut' on the corner to me was always known as 'Mannings'. I think Mr Manning lived at the top of the stray. I had a paper round there for a while, early mornings going as far as Crosslee factory. ...Read more
A memory of Hipperholme by
Memories Of Stone Hills.
This picture was taken from the corner of the Co-operative shop and features the Cherry Tree public house before it was turned into Waitrose. In about 1965, my friend’s mother remarried and my family was invited to ...Read more
A memory of Welwyn Garden City in 1965 by
My Fading Memories
I was but a lad of 8 when my folks bundled us all off to a wide land downunder. Since 1968, Australia has been my home. I often speak of my fading memories of Queensbury, my walks through the village, living on 'The Mountain', ...Read more
A memory of Queensbury in 1968 by
Wickham Bishops Born And Bred
In 1950 I was born on a cold winter's night to my mother Rosemary Jesse, at 'The Black Houses', Kelvedon Road, Wickham Bishops, built by architect, designer and socio-economic theorist Arthur Heygate Macmurdo. I ...Read more
A memory of Wickham Bishops by
Tommy Wiggins
Tommy Wiggins was a small-built man, he had round John Lennon NHS glasses, and had the Corner Farm in Fencott. He was a great friend of my grandfather, Charlie Hayes, and once every 2 weeks my grandfather peddled all the way from ...Read more
A memory of Fencott in 1966 by
School Days
I was a pupil at Easter Compton Infants School and remember Mrs Hunt Well . I also remember coke stoves used in winter and Mrs Withers the dinner lady. Meals were cooked elsewhere and brought to the School in hot boxes and Mrs Withers ...Read more
A memory of Easter Compton by
Captions
1,235 captions found. Showing results 985 to 1,008.
There is a motorbike and sidecar up in the corner near the Butter Cross. Could it be the one bought for the police station in 1926?
The corner shop is that of Cox and Humphries, a hardware and sports store, with Boots the Chemist towards the Market Place.
On the corner of the northern section of Bridge Street stands Lennard's shoe shop.
The north side of the Market Place (still a car park) was dominated by the Co-op, which expanded into the right-hand corner building of 1898. The statue in the niche on the left is of Byron.
Boots the chemist had built their original store on the corner opposite the Royal Hotel at the bottom of Market Street.
The corner entrance has since been replaced by a window, and a large bell now hangs above the main doorway.
The left-hand side of the High Street, however, is virtually the same as it is here, with the George Hotel on the corner of Station Road.
Candy Corner gave way to an office block in the 1980s. In the distance is Amptwade House of 1905 with mock timber gables, now Boutell and Son, funeral directors.
On the corner is The Laurels, a late Victorian bay-windowed villa dated 1897. Behind it is Beech Tree Court, houses formed out of old farmbuildings.
Great Easton lies in the south-east corner of the county, to the south of Eye Brook Reservoir, and to the north of industrial Corby, on the very edge of the Welland Valley.
The porch is interesting, with 'battlements and a tierceron- vault with bosses' - extra decorative ribs spring from the corners of each bay.
The taller building at the right-hand corner, early 18th-century, is now G H Porter, 'Provisions', but in 1806-07 this was where Lord Byron's first volumes of poetry were published.
A plaque dated 22 August 1951 set into the wall of the garden of Corner House reads: 'This plaque was erected by the Sawbridgeworth Urban District to commemorate the transfer to the Council of the manorial
Gorges' castle celebrated the Holy Trinity in its construction: it was triangular in shape, with a round tower on each of the three corners. Bodenham was extensively altered during the 19th century.
We can see the corner of the 13th-century castle in the top right of this photograph. The house dominating the picture was built by Thomas Mansel-Talbot in the 1770s.
Much of this corner of the country has fallen victim to the planner's axe, but pockets of open countryside and woodland still remain.
The parish church behind the holly hedge to the left at the corner of Ripley Road is partly Norman.
Earlier pictures of Evesham Street show Cranmore Simmons on the corner, a family-run furniture business established by Alfred Simmons in the 1920s.
On King Street and the corner of Station Road is an old cricket square, said to be where the first Lancashire versus Yorkshire match was played.
The foundation stone of this building was laid with two gold sovereigns beneath it, not in the north-east corner but at the southern end of the building, in 1889.
By now Hitchman's the chemists had been swept away: Montague Burton had built an art deco emporium (left) on the corner of Silver Street.
The Squirrels Inn, on the corner of Squirrel Lane, is virtually unchanged - an attractive ironstone building with a thatched roof.
The building on the right, now demolished, stood on the corner of what is now Vicarage Road, and was the first county library in the town.
Just off Lincoln's Inn Fields, a small corner building is dwarfed by its neighbours (even more so now - the right-hand building has been demolished and replaced by nine-storey buildings of 1970).
Places (140)
Photos (1214)
Memories (2797)
Books (0)
Maps (599)