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Photos
12 photos found. Showing results 1,101 to 12.
Maps
9,582 maps found.
Books
29 books found. Showing results 1,321 to 1,344.
Memories
4,582 memories found. Showing results 551 to 560.
Bell Street
I remember going to Bell Street around 1967/8 to see Michael Aspel open "Key Markets" which was a supermarket of sorts, and would be on the left-hand-side of this picture (I think either next door to the Co-op, or may have occupied the ...Read more
A memory of Wigston in 1967 by
Childhood Memory
The old photographs helped me remember some lovely memories of when I was a very young child, when it was a daily routine walking past the old brick works to go to Eye school, I believe that just past the brick works (obviously ...Read more
A memory of Eye
So Many Happy Hours
I spent so many happy summer holidays in Great Barton, and in particular Conyers Green where my Aunt Norah Lovelace lived in a cottage next to the old chapel building. I cycled often to the village store/post office, and to ...Read more
A memory of Conyer's Green by
Tithby Or Tythby
I used to live in the village of TYTHBY, spelled with a Y and not an I. I did not even know that there was another village close by with a similar name. But I have checked on the computer and there it is, not too far away in the ...Read more
A memory of Tithby in 1944 by
Lost Times
My memories are of Okenden in the early days, my father was born there and was from a family of 11 children, he was called Arthur Oakley, he lived there when the local bobby walked the streets pushing his pushbike, and if he did any ...Read more
A memory of South Ockendon in 1959 by
Parkstone Girls' Grammar School
This was the entrance to Parkstone Girls' Grammar school where I went from 1956, with Miss Allen as headmistress, until we moved to the present site in Sopers Lane in, I think, 1960 or 61, when these buildings were taken ...Read more
A memory of Poole in 1956 by
Miners Strike
My father (Robert Summers born Dec 1916) was 6 months old when his father was killed in Ypers. A few years later my gran remarried a miner, James MacLachlan, an ex Cameronian. My father told me a story of how, during the strike and at ...Read more
A memory of Twechar in 1920 by
Battersea
I remember the Granada, 6 pence for the Saturday morning flics. I always felt sorry for the plonker that had to do his bit and make us sing along before the flics started. After the show, down to 'Notarianni's for a 3 penny wafer of ice ...Read more
A memory of Battersea in 1949 by
Too Short A Stay!
I lived in Kirby Hill for one year from 1965 to 66, I was a 13 year old boy. I absolutely loved my time there and have many happy memories. My Mother and Father bought the Shoulder of Mutton in 1965 taking myself ...Read more
A memory of Kirby Hill in 1965 by
Morden Park
I lived in Morden from the age of 3 to the age of 16. What I really remember is that I made model aircraft of many different kinds which I used to fly in Morden Park. I used to cycle to "Normans Model Aircraft" shop in Kingston Road, ...Read more
A memory of Morden by
Captions
1,673 captions found. Showing results 1,321 to 1,344.
On the street, a new generation had not yet been born in the Victorian shot, but otherwise not much has changed.
From market place to bus terminus, centre for further education and declining shopping area; by 1955 Park Square was ripe for the redevelopment that did not actually happen for another 25 years.
This quiet north Hertfordshire village offers teas in the garden - or something a little stronger at the Three Horseshoes (left). The pub had been the village school in 1873.
The half-timbered Kings Head inn in the background recalls the coaching age: Northleach was on the main London, Oxford, Gloucester and South Wales road (the main A40 road now by-passes the
Both businesses have now moved.
The building is still there, but the business is now renting space for caravans, and another Mr Rose (son of William) is the proprietor.
The Tivoli Tavern can be seen to the left, but Albert Gait has been replaced by the Alliance and Leicester (the gabled building, centre left), and Citi Financial is installed in Pinbox House (centre).
Down at Church End there is another more well-known and photographed pond; it and the 13th-century parish church are to the left of the War Memorial.
The building to the right, Cliff House, gained another storey soon after this photograph was taken; in the 1920s, it offered 'furnished apartments - an ideal spot for summer or winter residence
We are not sure when it became the 'local', but it is thought that Mr Romer Williams, whose name it preserves, was the resident of Newnham Hall for the first decades of the 20th century.
Located in the suburb of Allerton, this junction provides access to West Allerton train station and to the B5180 and A562 arterial roads.
They started business in the 1860s, and the number of boats made by this firm and another called Emery's ran into hundreds.
The flint-faced buildings on the right are some of the original village houses, but virtually all the rest of the High Street buildings have been replaced.
The building is still there, but the business is now renting space for caravans, and another Mr Rose (son of William) is the proprietor.
The Tivoli Tavern can be seen to the left, but Albert Gait has been replaced by the Alliance and Leicester (the gabled building, centre left), and Citi Financial is installed in Pinbox House (centre).
The church clock was replaced in 1921 by another in memory of the villagers who fought in the First World War.
To the west of Jervaulx lies this pretty village, nestling around the spacious green.
Half a mile south of the hamlet with the parish church and Chiddingly Place is another small hamlet, Muddles Green, where cottages fringe a small green.
This panorama takes in the Old Winton Road, which crosses on the right. A lone block of four houses were the only dwellings on that straight length of road in 1899.
Next to the Arch is the Baker's Arms Hotel, another 18th-century building.
At the west end of the High Street, London Road curves away north-west downhill.
The photographer is looking east from the top of High Street, where there is now a roundabout, with the churchyard walls and lime trees on the left. The wall and railings have now gone.
On the extreme left is Palmers, with John Bull tyres and cycle lamp batteries on display in the window.
Once this lock on the Aire and Calder Navigation opened at 10am on 20 July 1826, trade boomed between the North Sea port of Hull and the West Yorkshire industrial heartland.
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