Places
5 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
9,649 photos found. Showing results 1,421 to 1,440.
Maps
18 maps found.
Books
13 books found. Showing results 1,705 to 13.
Memories
4,612 memories found. Showing results 711 to 720.
Our Honeymoon
These pictures bring back delightful memories! We spent a week of our honeymoon in the 16th century mill at Lydia Bridge. Across the lawn was a view of the brook and early spring flowers. We stepped outside to the sound of the ...Read more
A memory of South Brent in 1999 by
Cricket On The Village Green
When I worked for Samuel Jones the boys in our office played cricket against a team in Cookham Dean and we girls went along as support. What a great place this is! I remember a lovely village in lovely countryside - ...Read more
A memory of Cookham Dean in 1960 by
Recent Visit To This Spot
Recently we took my Dad's Canadian cousin to this spot. John Pine (her father) was born here at New Mills, Loddiswell in 1889. William Henry Pine (my great grandfather) was miller and parish overseer. In our family photos ...Read more
A memory of Loddiswell by
Unchanged Lerryn
Lerryn is a place that one almost wants to keep secret so that it does not become a popular destination. It has barely changed in a hundred years. A beautiful and unspoilt village in a steep sided valley, Lerryn lies at the tidal head ...Read more
A memory of Lerryn in 2004 by
My Early Years In Rothwell
I was born in Rothwell in 1949 and have lived there all my life and remember when it was a picturesque village where everyone knew each other. What changes have taken place over the years. I remember going to ...Read more
A memory of Rothwell in 1955 by
Where I Grew Up Born 1944
My Mum and Dad moved into the village in the 1930's into a new house in Rogers Lane and lived there for 66 years. My father was the village tailor working from a workshop in the back garden. My mother was very involved ...Read more
A memory of Stoke Poges in 1950 by
Raf Middle Wallop
1946, I was stationed at RAF Middle Wallop and remember the village with watercress beds. Rationing was of the vogue but next to the aerodrome was a bungalow that always supplied eggs and chips to ever hungry airmen. If anyone remembers me please get in touch. Jack Lawford.
A memory of Middle Wallop in 1946 by
During Wwii
I lived on Seal High Street (pretty well opposite the half timbered building & the horse trough in the photograph) from 1939 to 1951. My father was in the fire brigade. In those days you auditioned to become a choirboy. The Church music ...Read more
A memory of Seal in 1940 by
Happy Times
As children we were very priviliged to be part of the village community. We spent many carefree hours playing and making camps in the woods and fields, sometimes we would venture further but had to keep a watchful eye for the keepers. ...Read more
A memory of Turners Hill in 1965 by
Whats In A Name
My surname is Plucknett. Today I discovered the village of 'Haselbury Plucknett', not in the flesh of course, sadly, but when I Googled my surname to discover its history I found I had a namesake, in the shape of a village ...Read more
A memory of Haselbury Plucknett in 2008 by
Captions
5,016 captions found. Showing results 1,705 to 1,728.
The village has been eclipsed by 20th-century housing developments. However, there is still a good view from the Norman St Margaret's Church.
A couple of old villagers pass the time of day with a youngster in the West Cumbrian village of Gosforth.
The ivy-clad cottages facing the village green were built in the 19th century for agricultural workers, and are an example of the general improvement in housing for estate workers.
The Tannery is no more, but the buildings have been converted to residential use. Above the white roofed building, The Jubilee Parish Hall, is an area of land that was actually a tennis court.
Now firmly back in the ironstone hills, we reach Newnham, two miles south of Daventry. The village is set on the hilly north side of the young River Nene. Little has changed.
In walking country, the village, although undistinguished, is associated by local people with Newton Linford, Bradgate Park and Beacon Hill, or just as being on the back route from Leicester to Shepshed
Here we are looking east towards the hill down to the Hamble River. On the right we have Robertson, a chemist, and the local post office adding to the many shopping facilities for the inhabitants.
As well as the parish church and the village cross there are a couple of interesting memorials in the churchyard.
Cadnam, or Cadenham, stands at an important road junction at the north-western corner of the New Forest; sooner or later every traveller in the locality is bound to pass through the village.
Looking at this beautiful 16th-century thatched cottage, it is not difficult to see what attracted Kenneth Graham, author of The Wind in The Willows, and Dick Francis, ex-jockey and thriller writer, to
Farleigh Hungerford's post office closed in the 1990s, but the village retains a school, a church and a pub.
The village store faces the war memorial on the green, which appears to have been fenced off. Surely this was not protection from vandals!
The ford that gave Allerford its name lies beside an ancient, two- arched packhorse bridge.
Church Stile is the name of the road which goes around the parish church.
The village is home to both the College and the Shuttleworth Trust.
Mock Tudor villas were just beginning to spread out from the suburbs of Sheffield on to the former green fields of Hathersage when this photograph was taken.
The Swan Hotel 1926 The Swan Hotel stands on the outskirts of the village of Grasmere, on the A591, and was formerly a coaching inn on the main road between Windermere and Keswick.
A small village, built to house Parham Estate employees, Cootham is situated near to the foot of the downs.?
Although actually very old, this is another Medway-side village that was left with a distinctly Victorian appearance by the 19th century building boom, when it was a source of brick earth and also chalk
Another fishing village, Polkerris had one of the largest fish cellars in Cornwall, so big that it was known as a fish palace.
There are three village greens in Catterick, the village on the old A1 Great North Road which most people associate with the nearby army garrison.
The church is to the right, overlooking the small Baptist chapel with a small pinnacle on each corner of the front. It has a large graveyard.
It is obviously a quiet time of day in this Cheshire village.
This photograph shows the old village centre, looking from the Roman Catholic church of St Mary of the Angels. Carnforth Co-operative Society looked after the villagers' grocery needs.
Places (5)
Photos (9649)
Memories (4612)
Books (13)
Maps (18)