Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Poplar, Middlesex
- Bow, Middlesex
- Bethnal Green, Middlesex
- Stepney, Middlesex
- Alton Towers, Staffordshire
- Isle of Dogs, Middlesex
- Limehouse, Middlesex
- Spitalfields, Middlesex
- Barjarg Tower, Dumfries and Galloway
- Bromley, Middlesex
- Stratford Marsh, Middlesex
- Tower Hill, Merseyside
- Tower Hill, Essex
- St George in the East, Middlesex
- Wapping, Middlesex
- Globe Town, Middlesex
- Old Ford, Middlesex
- Cubitt Town, Middlesex
- Tower Hill, Cheshire
- Tower Hill, Surrey
- Bow Common, Middlesex
- Mile End, Middlesex
- Millwall, Middlesex
- Ratcliff, Middlesex
- Warmley Tower, Avon
- Tower Hill, Hertfordshire
- Tower End, Norfolk
- Tower Hamlets, Kent
- Tower Hill, Devon
- Tower Hill, West Midlands
- Blackwall, Middlesex
- North Woolwich, Middlesex
- Hackney Wick, Middlesex
- Shadwell, Middlesex
- South Bromley, Middlesex
- Tower Hill, Sussex (near Horsham)
Photos
2,720 photos found. Showing results 81 to 100.
Maps
223 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 97 to 1.
Memories
637 memories found. Showing results 41 to 50.
Billys Greengrocer
Billy's Greengorcer - a small shop on the corner of Hebron Street where you could buy fruit and veg, and almost anything else. In those years there was not an awful lot of choice.. two lots of potatoes, carrots, cauliflower, and ...Read more
A memory of Heyside in 1951 by
Ex St Roberts Catholic School Harrogate
Born in Waterloo Street, Harrogate, in early 1940s. Attended above school until left in 1956. Started work at J.S.Driver, grocers on Beulah Street, Stan Wood manager. Remember 'Syncopated Sandy,' playing ...Read more
A memory of Harrogate by
Fun Times
My maiden name was Glendinning, Anne, and we moved from Benton to Lilac Avenue in 1968 when I was 7 years old. We lived there while the house upgrades took place and quite a few of the families were shipped out to live in Killingworth ...Read more
A memory of Forest Hall in 1970
46 Bridge Road, Cove
46 Bridge Road at Cove is very significant to me because I was born in Bridge Road, no 46, on 29th June 1943, in the photo of Bridge Road it is the second house on the left, opposite Cove Supply Stores, so I'm sure my mother would ...Read more
A memory of Cove in 1943 by
Happy Days
Oh the memories stored away!! Charlie's opposite Cove Green, going there for sweeties on a Sunday, Cove Green (not as good as Tower Hill swings though!), Mundays closing at 1pm on Sundays, Thorntons with its yellow facade, and wool etc, I ...Read more
A memory of Cove in 1965 by
Durinawar
My first memory was of being taken to the air raid shelter on Tower Hill from Keith Lucas Road. I was held up as a babe in arms to see the "wee aeroplanes" that were bombing the R.A.E. I saw three "Flying Pencils" [it appears there were four]. ...Read more
A memory of Cove in 1945 by
The Day We Topped Out £12m New Leisure Centre In Wednesfield!
£12m Wednesfield Leisure Pool. It has been a very big week for both myself and Mary, we have attended 11 individual events as well as trying to hold the day jobs down! On Monday we ...Read more
A memory of Wednesfield by
The Gloster Arms
I was largely brought up in Mariner's Square. Directly opposite the Mariner's Hotel (the building with the portico) was a pub called the Gloster Arms. At the time this picture was taken it was run by my great grandmother and ...Read more
A memory of Haverfordwest in 1965
Stoney Beach & The Lifeboat Station
Parents in the (old) Kinmel Arms, boozing over an extended lunch time - my brother and me exiled to the adjoining Stoney Beach where we passed the hours away crushing the softer red stones ...Read more
A memory of Moelfre in 1957 by
Where It Is Now
I don't know when, but at some point the whole pavilion was moved to where it it still is, just behind Nat West and Philips' Tyres. It has been converted into a bungalow, but if you look closely you can see what it was. When we ...Read more
A memory of Shepton Mallet by
Captions
3,036 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.
This view was taken from the Tower Pier of Tower Bridge, with busy Butler's Wharf behind. To the right we can see Courage's brewery, dating from 1789; it closed in 1982.
Closer to the sea, the upper promenade climbs east to pass the Wish Tower with the sea now some way below.
On its summit are the remains of Jubilee Tower, built at a cost of £6,000 to celebrate the Jubilee (the 50th year of his reign) of George III in 1810, and once a prominent landmark.
This stunning panorama looks south-east over the battlements and roofs of London's most celebrated building and towards the river and Tower Bridge.
This tower escaped demolition during the Dissolution because it was a prominent landmark for ships entering the harbour.
The front would have been twice as high with turrets on the end towers, and with a massive central tower and spire, probably three times the height of the Norman Tower.
Jumbo the water tower can be seen, but work had only just started on the town hall, so its great tower has not yet appeared. The foliage clump in the water is still here a hundred years later.
This Victorian photograph was taken from Folly Bridge, which originally had a tower and gatehouse and was used by Roger Bacon, the 13th-century astronomer and scientist, as an observatory.
Flint was given a large but weak outer bailey, but the rectangular inner ward was supported with towers at the angles.
The Tea Gardens have long closed, but peeping over the roof is the squat battlemented tower of de Braose's Norman church, brutally treated subsequently, but notable for the 1070s tower arch capitals: wonderfully
King John lavished money on Lancaster, building curtain walls, round towers and Hadrian's Tower. In 1322 Robert the Bruce sacked the town, but was unable to take the castle.
St Michael's Church is unique in the county in having the base of the tower open on three sides. There is a picture with the arches walled up, but they were unblocked in the mid 1800s.
It stands between the Great Tower on the left and Buckden Towers on the right, built in 1872 for Marshall Snelgrove.
The tower of St Swithun's church, very much a landmark, shows where the old town is centred.
It is very well maintained and has been created in what remains of the original dry moat that surrounded the Round Tower. St George's Tower can be seen in the background.
clock tower. The richly- treated upper part has sculpted figures representing the four winds. Visually, the tower also successfully unites the Law Courts with the City Hall.
The walls and towers surrounding the county gaol, court house and Clifford's Tower were not medieval. They were in fact designed by Sydney Smith, Rector of Foston, and built in the 1820s.
The clock tower, with public lavatories at its base, was about 100 years old when this picture was taken. The tower commemorates the Public Health Act of 1848.
The old church had a medieval nave and chancel, and its brick west tower, built around 1800, replaced a medieval timber bell tower.
It is a busy beach in the Swinging Sixties: these people are not day trippers to Heysham, but guests of Middleton Towers who have made their way to the beach for a day of free activity and entertainment
We are looking down this attractive street to the St Thomas and Newport part of Launceston, where the old church tower is just visible.
On the right, the warm, brown fletton brick tower of Sir Giles Scott's Roman Catholic church of Our Lady of the Assumption soars above the surrounding buildings lining the broad street.
This view of the church tower clearly shows the tenuous link between it and the main body of the building.
A temporary wall separates it from the crossing tower and the dust from the building works beyond the west tower arch.
Places (38)
Photos (2720)
Memories (637)
Books (1)
Maps (223)