Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Devil's Bridge, Dyfed
- Menai Bridge, Gwynedd
- Hebden Bridge, Yorkshire
- Pateley Bridge, Yorkshire
- Sowerby Bridge, Yorkshire
- Bamber Bridge, Lancashire
- Bridge of Allan, Central Scotland
- Victoria Bridge, County Tyrone
- Two Mile Bridge, Republic of Ireland
- Greta Bridge, Durham
- Three Bridges, Sussex
- Newby Bridge, Cumbria
- Bridge, Kent
- Marple Bridge, Greater Manchester
- Wootton Bridge, Isle of Wight
- Woodford Bridge, Greater London
- Dunsop Bridge, Lancashire
- Forth Bridge, Lothian
- Haydon Bridge, Northumberland
- Shotley Bridge, Durham
- Wisemans Bridge, Dyfed
- Two Bridges, Devon
- Stanford Bridge, Hereford & Worcester
- Mylor Bridge, Cornwall
- Calder Bridge, Cumbria
- Whaley Bridge, Derbyshire
- Kerne Bridge, Hereford & Worcester
- Stamford Bridge, Yorkshire
- Drift Bridge, Surrey
- Cowan Bridge, Lancashire
- Acton Bridge, Cheshire
- Stow Bridge, Norfolk
- Penny Bridge, Cumbria
- Four Mile Bridge, Gwynedd
- Eamont Bridge, Cumbria
- Sutton Bridge, Lincolnshire
Photos
10,057 photos found. Showing results 861 to 880.
Maps
1,153 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
2,061 memories found. Showing results 431 to 440.
Post Office Sports Field
When I was a child in the 1940s, this sports field belonged to the Post Office. Occasionally there would be a horse in residence and this is where I had my first and only ride on such an animal. The stadium on the left caught ...Read more
A memory of Beddington by
Chestfield And Swalecliffe. The War Years,
Have many memories, some happy, some sad, culminating in the death of my mother, Ivy Maud Smith on the 16th August 1944 when a V1 destroyed a railway bridge causing the train she was on to crash. Had two ...Read more
A memory of Swalecliffe by
Belleville School
A lady writing on here mentioned a couple of places in Battersea that bring back memories. First of all, she mentioned Meyrick Road. I never lived there, but my mum and dad did when my mum was carrying me. My mum and dad were Mr. and ...Read more
A memory of Battersea by
Wokingham Shops
Anyone remember the petrol station ,next to saint Crispins school called Bourne and Thomas,a real traditional garage ,the thames trader tipper trucks moving the soil from the A329m ,green in colour ,think the company name was harry ...Read more
A memory of Wokingham by
Broomfield Bakeries,
Yes, I remember a small branch of Broomfields in the block next to Reeves Corner and opposite the Eagle Pub. There was also a Sanders Grocers next to it where Mum would buy split peas that we had that evening with Faggots bought from ...Read more
A memory of Croydon by
Distant Memories Of An Evacuee
My name is Nigel Redding and I was sent to Llangynwyd about 1942/43? as an evacuee. I was aged about 3 or 4 years old and accompanied by my older brother Alan who was 5 years older. (Both born in Rogerstone , ...Read more
A memory of Llangynwyd by
Fish Meadow Fun
The Fish Meadow is just North and East of the river bridge, and in my youth, (as now) was prone to flooding. I remember a year when the still water, stretching across the meadow (as opposed to the main river flow) froze over. ...Read more
A memory of Upton upon Severn
Early Thought Of Byfleet From The I.O.M.
I was born at 11, Church Road, Byfleet - the gardener's cottage, tied to 'Wey Barton', Mill Lane. That was then the residence of the Coles family, to whom my grandparents, Bert & Nellie Bird, were in service. We ...Read more
A memory of Byfleet by
Bennett&Sayers Nuns Street Derby
I served my apprenticeship at Bennett&Sayers from 1964 to 1972, the scrap yard opposite was always called Frank Radfords, further up Nuns street [over the bridge] this was the original Samways for the highways,[now ...Read more
A memory of Derby by
Captions
2,231 captions found. Showing results 1,033 to 1,056.
The broad channel between Drake's Island and Mount Edgecumbe, known as The Bridges, is only navigable via one narrow channel, which is why ships always appear to take 'the long way round', following
The humbler quarter of town is on the east side of the bridge over the Fowey, where the old road climbs out towards Liskeard.
During the Civil War Royalist forces defended the bridge here by hurling rocks from the top of the tower at the Parliamentarians assembled below.
This view looks north along the grassy dam towards the bridge over the sluices. There is now a two ft high brick wall along the track.
So busy was London bridge at peak times that the authorities were compelled to station police constables along the central rib of the roadway to encourage a smooth flow of traffic.
The River Brett is spanned by two 18th-century hump-backed bridges, one of which is dated 1754. The house on the right has since been rebuilt with dormer windows.
Shipbuilders swarm across the Walney Bridge from the dockyards at the end of a working day. A crane at Vickers dockyard can be seen in the background on the right.
There was always a flurry of excitement and activity at the Bridge Restaurant and Tea Gardens on Nags Head Island when the pleasure boats arrived, especially during the summer.
This photograph looks from the Old School down the A359 to the bridge over the Yeo, where a muddy ford once gave the village its name; this scene has little changed.
This overhead view of the Broomielaw area of the city shows the George V bridge in the foreground.
The rawness of the original cut has softened, and bridges have about them a mellowness so apparent in this photograph.
The elegant, five-arched ashlar bridge of around 1830 is named after the Countess of Wilton, whose husband - a well-known figure in the hunting world - bought Egerton Lodge and entertained the rich and
This view looks towards Lendal Bridge and the towering bulk of the Minster.
The railway line continues past the houses and the stone bridge of East Row, whilst the flow from the beck makes a tempting paddling pool.
Ladies' Walk ends a little more than a kilometre south-west of the bridge where the workman sits on Ladies' Walk.
Here, it passes beneath an old packhorse bridge beside what is now a caravan site at Burrowhayes Farm.
Standing almost squarely on the spot once occupied by Beda's ford (on Town Bridge), the photographer has captured the essence of a leisurely lifestyle.
Bridge Street leads on to Wood Street, where there is a fountain and a clock tower presented to the town in 1888 by an American visitor.
Before the development of Crawley New Town, the Hazlewick Mill path and bridge was a renowned beauty spot.
This quaint little cottage still nestles on the roadside leading from Prebends Bridge.
Peter's Church to Trent Bridge and to the railway station, then on Station Street. Horse buses ran to West Bridgeford.
Picturesque stone cottages line the main street through the village, which climbs from a bridge over Downham Beck to St Leonard's Church.
Shown here are two of the several bridges that cross the rivers of this valley, with hens scrabbling for food in the meadow nearby.
Bridge Road c1955 Yarmouth's original church was fired by the French raiders who twice attacked the town.
Places (284)
Photos (10057)
Memories (2061)
Books (0)
Maps (1153)