Places
10 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,534 photos found. Showing results 1,141 to 1,160.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
8,173 memories found. Showing results 571 to 580.
The Queen's Visit
I cannot be specific as to the date of the Queen's visit because I was very young at the time. On the left hand side of the road you can see what was at one time the post office but which later became a carpet shop. On the ...Read more
A memory of Little Sutton in 1956 by
When We Had A Shop
I was born in Little Marlow in 1947 and lived three doors away from the village shop, run by Miss Littlewood. I would go there and weigh the sultanas, currants etc., and put them into little blue bags. My Mum (Phyllis Wright) ...Read more
A memory of Little Marlow in 1950 by
The Artichoke On The Green
I used to walk or ride my bike past the Artichoke public house almost daily while running errands from the small group of shops opposite the church. There used to be a small cycle shop, news agent, grocers shop, and a ...Read more
A memory of Croxley Green in 1950 by
Yvonne Veronica Anne Drake Married A Chafai (Moroccan) In Bristol In 1965
Hi, Does anyone remember a young woman born in 1943 called Yvonne Veronica Anne Drake who was working in a ladies clothing store in Bristol in 1965. Her dad was Peter Frank Drake, an ...Read more
A memory of Bristol
Crothers Shop
Crothers shop was at the heart of the village where you could purchase just about anything that was necessary to keep body and soul together. All consumables, paraffin for the heater or lamp, the papers, sticks for lighting the fire, tobacco ...Read more
A memory of Lambeg by
Late Childhood Memories Of Watchfield
Like others on the site I have very happy memories of living in Watchfield (1956 to 1966).My father was the Hall Manager of Kitchener Hall (RMCS) and we lived in army quarters in Hill Road. The houses were two ...Read more
A memory of Watchfield by
Always Think Of It As Home.
I was born in Dovercourt hospital 24th December 1959. I lived above the Home and Colonial shop in the high street where my lovely Dad Mr. Roe was manager. My lovely mum Margaret often used to work there when my sister's Bren ...Read more
A memory of Dovercourt by
Addlestone In "The Good Old Days !"
i was born in Addlestone at Garfield Cottages, Garfield Lane (off Station Road) long gone now and replaced by the tower block of Surrey Towers. We moved to Courland Road in 1957 and I lived there until I married in ...Read more
A memory of Addlestone by
Salfords School
I was born in 1951 in Copsleigh Avenue (No 42). I must have started at the 'old' Salfords School in 1956. (My sister Jennifer was born in 1947 and was there too.) The photograph shows its location being just about deserted, apart from ...Read more
A memory of Salfords by
Captions
3,478 captions found. Showing results 1,369 to 1,392.
A brand new terrace of shops on the left replace some cottages, and soon after 1890 the Greyhound and Burgis' stores were rebuilt more grandly.
The large four-storey timber-framed building in the centre was a succession of shoe shops. Today it is the Woolwich Building Society.
Today, only the gallows pole across the street remains of its distinctive sign, while the building itself, along with Kemp's the bootmaker's, has been replaced by a massive new shopping centre.
The Chelmsford Window Cleaner was more self-sufficient: his handcart is just visible behind the Coal & Coke Merchants' shop.
This is one of several short parades of shops along the main road through Penn. Built in the early to mid 20th century, it remains largely unchanged today.
This view shows a peaceful scene along Brows Lane. However, redevelopment was about to rear its head. New retail outlets were built on the right hand side.
This was the entrance from Lumley Road to what is now Tower Gardens, before the frontage was built up with shops and cafés.
The old Laindon High Street had about 120 shops spreading in twos or threes from the Fortune of War down past the station to Langdon Hills.
Most of the shops now offer passing trade antiques rather than haircuts. Note the sign to the then quite new M1 motorway.
Here we look south along Church Road to the village shop, nestling behind the 17th-century Cobblers Cottage.
The antiques shop (right) next door to the White Horse pub is no longer in business.
The photograph shows congenial, modest, mostly early 19th-century buildings, with a series of shop fronts pre-dating the ugliness of late 20th-century aluminium framing and internally illuminated fascia
The shops to the left were demolished in 1902-3 to make way for Deangate.
The shops to the left were demolished in 1902-3 to make way for Deangate.
retention of mature trees has helped soften the vast expanse of new paving whilst the construction of new retail premises (right) underlines Cardiff's status as one of Britain's foremost shopping
Much of Grange was constructed during the later 19th century from local stone and slate, and there is a pleasing uniformity to the buildings that line its principal shopping street.
There is not a shop to let in sight. Mini cars appear to be flavour of the month with the drivers of Brierley Hill.When introduced in 1959 the Mini was radical in its design.
On the extreme right is Zetland House, next to the Ship Inn, and a few doors below is a butcher's shop, with slaughterhouse behind.
Customers at the corner shop in c1955 would have paid 4d for a 14oz loaf, 1s 3d for a 3lb bag of flour, and 2s 6d for 1lb of butter.
Jarrow's seven-acre pedestrian shopping precinct opened for business in February 1961; it was all part of a grand scheme to rid the town of its cloth cap image and to drag it into the modern age.
Since the 1950s the village shop has transferred to the middle distance, near the van.
Now it provides a focal point for the start of the town's main shopping street.
This little group of shops was built in 1908, on the site of a former wheelwright and boat-building business.
Its shop front, and indeed its whole demeanour, almost shout reliability and good solid service. Unfortunately, flashy cuckoos have taken over the High Street nest.
Places (10)
Photos (2534)
Memories (8173)
Books (0)
Maps (71)