Places

3 places found.

Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Photos

68 photos found. Showing results 1,441 to 68.

Maps

12 maps found.

Books

15 books found. Showing results 1,729 to 15.

Memories

7,548 memories found. Showing results 721 to 730.

Newcastle University

I attended the University from 1970 - 1973 studying Surveying and Mathematics with Messrs Carmody and Newton. I lived in Havelock Hall for two years, and was involved with the JRC committee that ran the social side of ...Read more

A memory of Newcastle upon Tyne in 1970 by Edward Williams

Newtonheath Loco Football Ccub

I remember sneaking into the match by going past the lodging house on Warden Lane and going by the railwayside and through a hole in the fence that the railway men had made so that they could watch ...Read more

A memory of Newton in 1950 by Jack Rigby

Alan & Hilda

Alan and Hilda Slater were my Uncle and Aunty and lived at the post office for many years and were quite possibly the funniest people I ever knew. Stanhill Post Office is reputedly haunted and Uncle Alan took every opportunity to use the ...Read more

A memory of Stanhill by Steven Hargreaves

Ratfyn Power Station

In the 1950s I was in the Royal Engineers and came over from Germany to our school of military engineering at Chatham where we did a course in electrical power stations. We were then posted to Bulford barracks, and did our ...Read more

A memory of Bulford in 1954 by Norman Webb

Remembering Byfleet

I was born in Byfleet in 1950. We lived in Binfield Road. Later I moved to the hotel that was built where the village green is now. My mother Beatrice Stenning was the housekeeper, cook, maid and everything in between. My dad ...Read more

A memory of Byfleet by Paulene Morgan

The Long Family Hindringham

I have been researching my family history and have traced the family tree back to Robert Long, born in Hindringham in 1798. I would be interested to hear from anyone who has been carrying out genealogical research into the same family. David Long.

A memory of Hindringham by David Long

Fleur De Lys

My mother grew up in Lowsonford, her parents owned the Fleur de Lys, it was a wedding present from my great-grandad. My grandmother, Mrs Elizabeth Tarplee, started to make steak pies at the pub for the passing boats. My mother had a ...Read more

A memory of Lowsonford in 1920 by Daphne Harding

West Street Shops

Shops on West Street in the 1960s were left to right: Merritts the butcher next door to Blackiston the butcher, famous for the specialty sausages, also had its own slaughterhouse and in the back garden an Anderson shelter used by ...Read more

A memory of Midhurst in 1960 by Doug Murphy

12 Glebe Avenue Kolordek

This picture is just too small to see if my parents' shop - Kolordek - is illustrated in the row. We moved away around 66/67. Vaiseys had the grocers next door - I was friends with their daughter, and the grocer's next to ...Read more

A memory of Ickenham in 1962 by Patricia Reeve De Becker

Fond Memories

I remember St Faith's hospital very well. I was the Head Porter there for a number of years until it was closed down. I met my wife there. She was a catering assistant. We were engaged with two other couples in the social club.That ...Read more

A memory of Brentwood in 1985 by John Dale

Captions

2,501 captions found. Showing results 1,729 to 1,752.

Caption For Babbacombe, The Downs 1918

A popular clifftop band concert at Babbacombe. Once a small village, Babbacombe has long been subsumed into Torquay and struggles to keep its own identity.

Caption For Accrington, Market 2004

The new outside market stalls which stretch along the Peel Street side and the back of the Market Hall were built in 2003 to replace the concrete umbrella market, which was demolished in 2002.

Caption For Charlestown, The Harbour C1955

Looking up the harbour, we can see a small Dutch coaster loading china clay at two chutes. Such motor ships were common around the Cornish coast from between the wars until the 1970s.

Caption For Cambridge, King's College, The Bridge 1909

The Backs, which are the lawns, meadows and gardens behind the colleges which back on to the River Cam, are a favourite place for recreation.

Caption For Winsford, The Royal Oak Inn 1930

Originally a 13th-century farm, the building became a halt for packhorse trains carrying wool across the hills.

Caption For Bath, On The Canal 1895

The Kennet and Avon Canal, authorised by Act of Parliament in 1794 and opened in 1810, linked Bristol with London, cutting a canal from the Avon in Bath to the Kennet, which was then canalised to the Thames

Caption For Folkestone, The Leas Bandstand 1901

The Leas bandstand was built in 1885. A large crowd has gathered to hear the band, including the lady in the invalid carriage in the centre of the photograph.

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Caption For Gourock, From The Pier 1900

This view shows the backs of buildings along Kempock Street. Kempock Place is just in view on the extreme left of the picture.

Caption For Flushing, 1918

The small boy in the sternsheets of the boat being rowed by the white-bearded man in the peaked cap seems singularly unimpressed by photography, unlike the youth in the stern of the rowboat

Caption For Whitby, East Cliff 1913

On the extreme left we can just see the so-called Spa ladder, leading to the East Pier. On the right side we can see the back of the Cholmley School, which was endowed by Lady Cholmley in 1869.

Caption For Boscombe, From The Pier 1906

With the turret of the Chine Hotel, which served as a landmark for Channel shipping, prominent in the back- ground, the elegant row of Victorian houses along Undercliffe Road bears tribute to the enduring

Caption For Tenterden, High Street 1900

This was the year that Coca Cola arrived in Kent and an outbreak of typhoid fever terrified local families. At this time the Headcorn to Tenterden railway line was opened.

Caption For Lancaster, The Town Hall 1912

At the centre of Dalton Square stands a bronze statue of Queen Victoria guarded by four lions, given to the city by Lord Ashton. He also donated the new Town Hall, which stands at the back.

Caption For Burnley, Manchester Road 1952

The ornamental floral beds that here border St James' Street have now been removed, but buses still use the area as their terminus.

Caption For Bacup, St James' Street C1955

The ornamental floral beds that here border St James' Street have now been removed, but buses still use the area as their terminus.

Caption For Lincoln, Cathedral 1890

This view from an upper window across Eastgate shows the north side of the minster with the back wall of the cloisters on the left.

Caption For Mullion, Fishermen 1924

Small inshore fishing boats are drawn up at the back of the harbour, where two jetties were built in the 1890s to provide shelter and encourage this local industry.

Caption For Ascott Under Wychwood, The Swan C1950

Very much a village pub, the Swan has a beer garden at the back to cater for the local populace, who number around 500, and visitors who come this way to walk round this quiet spot.

Caption For Guildford, Market Street 1904

Most of Market Street was taken up by the now demolished Red Lion.

Caption For Chelmsford, The Wesleyan Church 1898

Photographed in the year it was built, this church had seating for 800 people, and a commodious schoolroom at the back.

Caption For Saundersfoot, Wisemans Bridge Inn C1965

This settlement probably got its name from Andrew Wysmon, a tenant knight at the time of Edward II's reign.

Caption For Prestbury, The Manor House 1903

At the bottom of the street is the bridge over the River Bollin and the Manor house.

Caption For Empingham, Highfield Close C1960

At about this time, Rutland villages began to acquire small housing estates, usually on the edges. At first they were council houses, and later private developers came in.

Caption For Fittleworth, Lea Hill 1908

In this view from the west, the man in the straw boater looks past the school with its attached hipped-roofed master's house to Lea Hill, now known as Fittleworth Common.