Places
8 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
80 photos found. Showing results 81 to 80.
Maps
49 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,417 memories found. Showing results 41 to 50.
Fishing In Vernon Park Lake.
As a boy I often fished in Vernon Park Lake. I'm now eighty-six and now living in Bingham. However, a year ago I paid a nostalgic visit to the Park to see if there had been any changes.Of course there had. Through the late ...Read more
A memory of Old Basford by
London Evacuee
June 1940 our primary school The London Oratory was evacuated en masse to Exmouth. I remember arriving at the railway station when we were all put on a coach and went to the Pavilion on the sea front. We then lined up on the stage and ...Read more
A memory of Exmouth by
Football Years
I played for the first Sudbrook Cricket Club football team. We came second in the East Gwent 2nd Division and got promoted. I played with: Dave Clements, Mike Keogh, Paul Little, Ivor Baker, Tony Cochrane, Bobby Noade, Darren Noade, ...Read more
A memory of Caldicot in 1980 by
Nostalgia
The garage, owned if memory serves by the Harrison family, was always a magnet for a small boy, because in addition to selling petrol and repairing cars it also sold Meccano and Dinky toys. I also remember my grandmother buying me the Sunny ...Read more
A memory of Langwith in 1948 by
Maltby Memories
I lived in Bubwith from August 1949 until January 1961 when my family moved to York following the sale of the family grocery business. The shop was located directly opposite the end of The Intake on the main village street and is now a ...Read more
A memory of Bubwith by
Miner
My uncle Des emigrated from Dublin to Coronation Drive, Bolton On Dearne in 1950, he became a miner. In the course of writing letters home he told my mam that the streets of Bolton on Dearne were paved with gold, he had actually ...Read more
A memory of Bolton Upon Dearne by
Crossing The Moor
My secondary education was completed after spending 4 years at Irvine Royal Academy. The school was broken into two buildings known as the old school (pictured) and the new school in Kilwinning Road. Classes were conducted between both ...Read more
A memory of Irvine in 1969 by
S T Joseph's Salesian School Burwash
I was a boarder at St joseph's from 1947 to 1951. We lived in Lincolnshire. My father was an OLD BOY of the Salesian School at Battersea and this was my start to follow him there. We traveled in special compartments ...Read more
A memory of Burwash by
Ashtead Resident Finds Herself In 1925 Caterham Bus Photo
The above photo is the pond which is close to Dorothy Connor's current home in Glebe Road, Ashtead. This area has not changed so very much since the time the Frith photo was taken in ...Read more
A memory of Ashtead by
Grouse Beating
As a student I spent 3 seasons working as a beater on Lord Sopwiths estate. I first worked a few days during a holiday with family friends called Rita and Albert Sparks who had holidayed in Arkengarthdale for many years. The ...Read more
A memory of Arkengarthdale in 1960 by
Captions
877 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.
The road follows the line of the old Roman road which linked North Gate and Head Gate, both entrance points to the original Roman walled town.
Broadway and its continuation, the High Street, almost certainly follow the line of an ancient trackway that crossed the River Itchen during the Iron Age.
Slough began to expand following Slough Estates' acquisition of 700 acres of derelict land in 1920.
Now the tower of St Michael`s Church is more obvious, following the destruc- tion of numbers 1 and 2 Esplanade (the Berkeley and Esplanade Hotels) in September 1942.
The last Scottish national parliament was held here in 1646.Oliver Cromwell lived at the palace for several months following the Battle of Dunbar in September 1650.
The Grand has recently undergone a complete refurbishment and modernization, so this photograph reveals a little of its former tarnished glory following its heyday in the 1930s.
Demolition of the Grammar School began in June 1998, and by the following January plans were approved for the building of these modern homes.
There were a whole range of shops along the Broadway, ranging from a chemist's, a sweet shop, a gentlemen's outfitter's, a garage, a bank and the gas showroom, but competition was to follow from
Following the opening of the Forth Bridge, the North British Railway Co decided that they could dispense with their ferry services.
Robert Peel, William Gladstone and W H Auden were among the college's more distinguished students, and when John Fell was dean here, one of his scholars based a famous Latin epigram on him following a
Brunel, showing considerable foresight, did not cut Dawlish off from the sea when he built his railway, but incorporated its walls into a splendid promenade which can be followed all the way to Dawlish
Howe Bridge was closed by the NCB in 1957; Gibfield followed in 1963, and Chanter in 1966.
The elegant Abbey Crescent was built in 1858 in anticipation of the opening of the nearby railway station the following year.
The rebuilding which followed left nine greens - effective firebreaks against any future catastrophe - and it is these which give Southwold its unique character.
In October 1644, during the Civil War, Cromwell's men camped in the fields surrounding the village of Chieveley before doing battle at Newbury the following day.
The defensive wall runs for three miles, and had to be repaired following the tidal surge in 1953.
Shropshire towns have long had a reputation for their displays of hanging baskets and window boxes, a fashion that the rest of the country seems only recently to have followed.
Thatched cottages are comparatively rare in this part of Derbyshire; to see Baslow's examples, you have to follow the signposted path for Chatsworth, which starts at the car park.
A great deal of building took place during the years that followed; the population increased three-fold during Queen Victoria's reign.
A good introduction to Dorset would be to follow the course of the River Piddle from its source to the sea, passing through some delightful villages along the way.
The cliffs to the south of Perranporth are riddled with the adits of old mine workings, which followed the rich veins of tin and copper that ran from the granite intrusion of Cligga Head into the surrounding
It was at Catterick in AD 625 that Paulinus, first Bishop of York, baptised converts to Christianity, following the marriage of King Edwin of Northumbria to Ethelburga of Kent.
A great deal of building took place during the years that followed; the population increased three-fold during Queen Victoria's reign.
The elegant Abbey Crescent was built in 1858 in anticipation of the opening of the nearby railway station the following year.
Places (8)
Photos (80)
Memories (1417)
Books (0)
Maps (49)