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, Hertfordshire
- West End, Suffolk
- West End, Sussex
- West End, Strathclyde
- West End, Gwent
- 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)
- West End, Bedfordshire (near Kempston)
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
2,053 memories found. Showing results 551 to 560.
Going To School
I have lived in Australia now for over 40 years. I still have very fond memories of my walk from Grenville Close to West Cowes High school as a 13yr old. The floating bridge was where I had my first smoke and my first kiss!!!! How I ...Read more
A memory of East Cowes in 1961 by
World War Ii
This picture looks as if it is looking down the street with the church on the right hand side. The Post Office in 1940 was opposite the entrance to the churchyard. Every Saturday morning I would run to the Post Office through the ...Read more
A memory of Milton Lilbourne in 1941 by
Silver Jubilee Parade 1935
I remember well the parade through the village on the occasion of the Silver Jubilee. My mother and several other mothers dressed six of us young boys as toy soldiers and we had to march in the parade. However, the ...Read more
A memory of West Lulworth in 1930 by
I Used To Live Here
I grew up living in a cottage on West Street (just out of shot on the left) Next door to Mr and Mrs Vincent. Mr Vincent had the garage over the road... I remember that he had a penny farthing bike in the window. The Cooper's ...Read more
A memory of Somerton by
The Station
Our cottage in West Street used to almost back on to the railway line. We lived next door to Mr and Mrs Dummet (Aunty Mable and Uncle Ern) next door again was the telephone exchange (I think a boy called Michael Elliot lived there) then ...Read more
A memory of Somerton by
Hassocks Primary School In The 1950s
I was at the school from 1948 until 1955, at which point the 11+ sent me to Hove County Grammar. Starting in 1948 in Miss Wood's class I ended with two years in the top class with Miss Nichols. In between I was ...Read more
A memory of Hassocks by
Good Old Days
I was born in 1946 lived in Lifton until I got married in 1971. I lived in Fore St next door lived Mr Brown he used to repair shoes in his little shed in the garden I used to watch him working. just a few doors away Bill Keast he was ...Read more
A memory of Lifton in 1960 by
Years Gone By
Moved to Roadhead 1949, from 19 Netherby St, Longtown. Dad was Rendall Colling [Policeman], we lived at the Police House, until 1954 when we moved to Frizington, West Cumberland. Went to school at the Baily. Brother Cuthbert was born ...Read more
A memory of Roadhead in 1949 by
Making Our Own Entertainment
Across from The Angler Retreat in Cricket field Lane is the river Coln. Down the lane on your left you pass the West Drayton Cricket Club with the river on your right. Next to the cricket field is The Coln Park ...Read more
A memory of West Drayton in 1952 by
In Line And Two By Two
Miss Cary was short and stout with grey hair in a bun. She always wore a cameo brooch on a white silk blouse, grey skirt and sensible shoes. She was kind and patient, she was also my first teacher. One day as the mothers picked up ...Read more
A memory of Kew in 1951 by
Captions
1,994 captions found. Showing results 1,321 to 1,344.
The George Brewery was established in 1702, and was owned and run by the George family from 1788 until 1961 when it was bought by Courage.
Dating mainly from the 13th century, it features an impressive square west tower, an aisled nave, transepts and chancel.
Inside there are monuments to Sir William Gilstrap, a pottery manufacturer, of Fornham Park (who died in 1896) and Henry Claughton, an HMI in West Suffolk for 38 years (he died in 1924)
In this view we are looking north-west up London Road towards the Queens Head in the distance, beyond the junction with East Street.
During the late 18th and early 19th centuries a large number of country houses were built in the castellated style.
Looking north-west past the village cross, we see the church with its curiously plain tower and mean spire.
Westport was separated from Malmesbury as it was situated outside the west gate to the town, and it was linked to the town by Abbey Row.
The medieval church, with its plain west tower and stumpy shingled broach spire, was extensively restored, not entirely successfully, in the 1850s by William Slater for the dynamic Reverend Arthur Eden
West of the village centre is Wadhurst Castle.
This view is taken further down West Street, with the churchyard on the left and the boundary walls of the Victorian Baptist Church on the right.
On the west bank of the Taw, this view shows the old road (left), and new one (right). The houses to the right are Ladysmith Villas, named after the second Boer War siege (1900). They still stand.
To the west of Farley Heath and Blackheath, the hamlet of Blackheath grew up in Victorian times.
With their barrack buildings in the background, and eight tents pitched alongside the parade ground, the officers and men of the Royal West Surrey regiment march off parade.
In the foreground is the railway, and further back stands the church of St Mary the Virgin. The Grosvenor Hotel on the right has now gone, and the building houses shops.
Further west along the A30, Chard is a market town laid out in 1234 by Bishop Jocelyn of Wells.
Without through traffic, this thousand-year-old village retains its rural traditions and sense of history. A century ago, West Burton was a lively farming village with a market and many shops.
This view depicts the bustle in West Steet, with children and cycles, and a flock of sheep being driven uphill (left of centre). Market stalls for animals can be seen between the trees.
Reaching Spalding we are in the heart of the bulb-growing country; the surrounding countryside is a glorious carpet of daffodils, tulips and other flowers at different times of the year.
The tiny hamlet of Leigh lies on the east bank of the River Severn, perched on land just high enough to raise it from the floodplain, a few miles north-west of Cheltenham.
Further west, on the Stony Stratford to Northampton road, is another Yardley.
Buckinghamshire's County Lunatic Asylum was built at Stone, three miles west of Aylesbury, in the early 1850s. It was given a more ornate entrance building in the 1860s, including the tower.
Here we have a good view of the area that is to the west of Market Square.
This view is looking westwards towards Symondsbury and Exeter along what was generally called the London Road, with a variety of hand-carts and a couple of girls failing to stay still for Frith`s photographer
Gregory Gregory, a bachelor, was probably responsible for as much of the design as his architects, Anthony Salvin and later William Burn, as it rose slowly throughout the 1830s and 1840s.
Places (99)
Photos (279)
Memories (2053)
Books (19)
Maps (1651)