Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- West End, Gwynedd
- West End, Hampshire (near Southampton)
- West End, Surrey (near Camberley)
- West End, Hampshire (near Medstead)
- West End, Leicestershire
- Ward End, West Midlands
- Shard End, West Midlands
- West End, Gloucestershire
- West End, Dorset
- West End, Strathclyde
- West End, Mid Glamorgan
- West End, Gwent
- West End, Hertfordshire
- West End, Suffolk
- West End, Sussex
- West End, Lancashire (near Morecambe)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Tadcaster)
- West End, Avon (near Nailsea)
- West End, Somerset (near Wells)
- West End, Oxfordshire (near Wallingford)
- West End, Berkshire (near Wokingham)
- West End, Norfolk (near Great Yarmouth)
- West End, Bedfordshire (near Great Staughton)
- West End, Kent (near Sittingbourne)
- West End, Yorkshire (near South Cave)
- West End, Avon (near Yate)
- West End, Wiltshire (near Shaftesbury)
- West End, Wiltshire (near Bowerchalke)
- West End, Berkshire (near Bracknell)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Driffield)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Hedon)
- West End, Lincolnshire (near Boston)
- West End, Cumbria (near Carlisle)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Cleckheaton)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Horsforth)
- West End, Oxfordshire (near Hardwick)
Photos
279 photos found. Showing results 1,101 to 279.
Maps
1,651 maps found.
Books
19 books found. Showing results 1,321 to 19.
Memories
2,057 memories found. Showing results 551 to 560.
Isaac And Margretta Griffiths
Isaac And Margretta Griffiths lived in Cefneithin, (Dyfed) in Tabor Villa on Carmarthen Road until 1939. From there they ended up living in West Bromwich in the West Midlands. As far as i understand it was my granfather, ...Read more
A memory of Cefneithin by
‘Bert, The Picture Man’ – He Took The Silent Movies To West Norfolk – Looks Back On A Golden Age
I found this cutting from the Lynn News & Advertiser, Friday, January 12, 1968 and thought it might be of interest to others. IF ANYONE COULD BE CALLED A ...Read more
A memory of Hunstanton by
Southall 1950's
We lived in Hillingdon but I used to often visit Southall as a child as my father and uncle had shops in South Road. On Saturday my father and I used to arrive early morning then visit a cafe a few doors away with plasticised tables ...Read more
A memory of Southall by
Recollections Of Ash Vale By Lt Col Taylor
RECOLLECTIONS OF ASH VALE By Lt Col Taylor Ash Vale, viewed from the main route through it the Frimley and Ash Vale roads would not have appeared to alter a lot during the last 100 years. Houses do now ...Read more
A memory of Ash Vale by
One Horse Town!
Had 5 yrs living in west dereham, beautiful village, nice walks across fields,and lots of wildlife unfortunately not a lot else going for it, a very close knit, verging on clicky community! shame so much money was put into a village ...Read more
A memory of West Dereham
Childhood Years Early 70s
I remember going to Dartford with my mum and going to a shop called Kerr's Drapery in the High Street. I was fascinated by the way they gave change to their customers. The shop assistant would put money into a capsule which ...Read more
A memory of Dartford
Childhood & Youth In West Kilburn
After the war, my brother David & I returned to Kilburn from evacuation. Our Smith family was re-united at 28 Kilburn House, Malvern Place, where mum (Isobel) continued to live during the Blitz. Dad ...Read more
A memory of Kilburn by
Bexleyheath In My Youth 1944 1960
I was born in 1944 and lived at 12 Rowan Road. I lived and played in Bexleyheath until 1960 when I joined Port Line and sailed off into the world. I returned after each trip but around 1962 I "jumped ship" in ...Read more
A memory of Bexleyheath by
My Prison Wedding
my name is Nicola and i think me and my husband was the last people to get married at camp hill we got married October 2010 it was the best day of my life getting married there i traveled from west sussex with my son and Stacie ...Read more
A memory of Camp Hill Prison by
The Alpine For Tea
I remember driving out to The Alpine for tea from North West London. It was an outing purely for Tea and Scones and it seemed like a long journey from NW10 to Bushey. Was in the 60's not as early as 1955!
A memory of Bushey Heath by
Captions
1,993 captions found. Showing results 1,321 to 1,344.
Mostly rebuilt by Thomas Lumby in the 1770s in a fairly correct Gothic, the church has a more cheery Strawberry Hill Gothick west tower and spire.
The Royal Victoria Pavilion, which stands close to the sands below the East Cliff, opened in 1904, and is pictured here when it was nearly new.
The black and white marks on the kerbstones indicate the junction. This is a small handsome town on the River Test with Georgian buildings that are rendered or red brick.
The road leads all the way round the shore here, and today there is a car park behind the third building.
Situated six miles west of Darlington, Piercebridge is unusual in that the village was built within the ramparts of a Roman fort that once guarded the bridge over the Tees carrying the road between York
Mostly rebuilt by Thomas Lumby in the 1770s in a fairly correct Gothic, the church has a more cheery Strawberry Hill Gothick west tower and spire.
Midhurst is a town of contrasts, with an early medieval core around the church, west of the Norman castle earthworks on St Anne's Hill, and the wide North Street, a later medieval planned market place.
A mile south-west we come to Athelney, a name redolent of Anglo-Saxon history.
On the west side, between the figures and the church tower, is the establishment of draper and milliner Ernest Benjamin Hobbs.
This is how we lived forty years ago: a quiet road, milk delivery by pony and trap to the pub, schoolchildren waiting for a bus - all bathed in sunshine.
A market place since at least 1235, the west side shown here survives much better than the north side.
On their way to Aysgarth, carriages would pass through West Witton.
Between the 1880s and the early 1920s, workers flocked from all over the south-west to find work in Abertillery's coal mines.
The County Lunatic Asylum was built at Stone, three miles west of Aylesbury, in the early 1850s by the architects Thomas Wyatt and David Brandon.
This photograph looks from the west towards St Austell in its rural setting.
The local sandstone is not that durable, and St Stephen's has needed more than one restoration in the course of its relatively short life.
Designed by Henry Edward Kendall in 1839, and situated to the west of Cockfosters Underground station, this stock brick church was financed by the Bevan family who owned Trent Park, and whose origins were
This view, looking west, shows E J Pipe's general store smothered in advertisements (left). This is now the Butley Oysterage, and the bay window has been removed.
The picturesque village is situated on a minor east-west road, rising up from the reservoir past Sir James Pennethorne's hall, which took some twenty years to complete, the medieval parish church and
Off West Street, behind Sparnham House, was the site of one of Ashburton's two umber mines - the only ones in the country.
The Reach dates from the 13th century and used to extend further into the town.
Medway, and is another contender for the 'most attractive village in Kent' title. Certainly it seems very well planned around its spacious central green with its mature chestnut trees.
Chapter Three is a tour of the rolling oolitic limestone south-west part of Lincolnshire, until 1974 the County of Kesteven.
In between the dramatic hills of Great and Little Whernside, Coverham lies in a hollow 2 miles west of Middleham.
Places (99)
Photos (279)
Memories (2057)
Books (19)
Maps (1651)