Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Hest Bank, Lancashire
- Kents Bank, Cumbria
- Copthorne Bank, Sussex
- Banks, Lancashire
- Sutton Bank, Yorkshire
- Astwood Bank, Hereford & Worcester
- Dacre Banks, Yorkshire
- Ten Mile Bank, Norfolk
- Matlock Bank, Derbyshire
- Bank, Hampshire
- Hesketh Bank, Lancashire
- Far Bank, Yorkshire
- Bank's Green, Hereford & Worcester
- Banks, Cumbria (near Lanercost)
- Banks, Dumfries and Galloway (near Kirkcudbright)
- Bunsley Bank, Cheshire
- East Bank, Gwent
- Hanwood Bank, Shropshire
- Hoole Bank, Cheshire
- Howbeck Bank, Cheshire
- Papermill Bank, Shropshire
- Pickup Bank, Lancashire
- Malkin's Bank, Cheshire
- Meal Bank, Cumbria
- Sandy Bank, Lincolnshire
- Scilly Bank, Cumbria
- Steel Bank, Yorkshire
- Bogs Bank, Borders
- Alsagers Bank, Staffordshire
- Bury's Bank, Berkshire
- Brandon Bank, Cambridgeshire
- Cat Bank, Cumbria
- Cadney Bank, Clwyd
- Dawley Bank, Shropshire
- Dean Bank, Durham
- Lade Bank, Lincolnshire
Photos
1,065 photos found. Showing results 1,461 to 1,065.
Maps
786 maps found.
Books
15 books found. Showing results 1,753 to 15.
Memories
6,743 memories found. Showing results 731 to 740.
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
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
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
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
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
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
Dunsmore People And Happenings Remembered
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION In 1995, when the first edition of this history was published, it seemed incredibly optimistic to have had three hundred copies printed for a market which was ...Read more
A memory of Dunsmore by
Hann Family
I don't have a memory as such, but a lot of my family were born and bred in Beaminster, which I had a very brief visit to in 2009, I found it a very nice little village and would loved to have been able to stay longer and trace some of ...Read more
A memory of Beaminster in 1880 by
Childhood In Wreckenton
I started school at St Oswald's RC in 1944. We lived on Tanfield Road. I remember the head teacher was called Miss Wilfred, and later we had a headmaster called Mr Clancy. I remember when the war finished and we had to ...Read more
A memory of Wrekenton in 1940 by
Wonderful Memories Growing Up In Bassaleg
I lived in Bassaleg from the age of 3, (1955), when Church Crescent and surrounding area was being developed. I lived in Church Crescent with my family until I left for Manchester in 1976. I went to the ...Read more
A memory of Bassaleg in 1966 by
Captions
2,423 captions found. Showing results 1,753 to 1,776.
This old dome-shaped weather-beaten pump dates back to medieval times, and is situated at an important junction in the middle of this historic town.
The railway was a working narrow gauge route running passengers up to the Corris quarries and bringing slate back.
The Newmarket connection with racing dates back to the time of Charles II, although the sport's main boost came during the reign of Victoria, promoted by her son, the Prince of Wales.
An obliging servant stepped into the water offering to piggy-back the king across - hence Kingsbridge.
The wall on the left now has two boards bearing the names of all the Mayors of Totnes back to 1359.
Cadhay Bridge dates back to the time of Queen Elizabeth I.
Melcombe Bingham's manor house dates back to the time of the Plantagenet kings, though much of the present building is Tudor.
This view was taken from the iron bridge, and shows the backs of various High Street and Moulsham Street properties. Some of them had their own landing stages.
People from Exeter used the sea and sands, the only good bathing beach in the east, back in the early seventeenth century.
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
Thurlestone takes its name from a holed, or thirled, rock just out at sea in Bigbury Bay, which was mentioned in a Saxon charter way back in 845.
Laleham's charming parish church has a tower dating back to 1732; it has been altered somewhat since this photograph was taken.
In bygone times the hotel had a back yard in which strolling minstrels and poets would entertain.
The van on the left was ahead of its time by using the back door for the slogan: 'If it's tractors ask Reginald Tildesley'. In the background is the turreted tower of St Mary's parish church.
We can see the sign of the Barley Mow, which is set back from the street.
Some farm cottages date back to 1659 in this pretty village just east of Skipton.
Slough dates back to the 12th century, when it was a hamlet on the London to Bath road. The settlement later spread to the neighbouring parish of Stoke Poges.
Boroughbridge, to the southeast of Ripon, dates back to Norman times, when a bridge was constructed over the Ure. It was then known as Burgbridge, the borough on the bridge.
Powers were sought in Parliament to establish new residential areas, and many of the squares and avenues of modern- day Cheltenham date back to that period.
In the centre of the picture stands the forge, which is believed to date back over 670 years, although it is thought that horses and ponies were shod here long before that.
A motor boat waits for passengers, and to recover skiffs abandoned by their occupants when it was time to bring them back. A queue has formed waiting to enter the swimming pool.
The long, galleried Granary possibly dates back to the reign of Charles II, and is now part of the Museum.
There is a great deal of attractive Georgian architecture, and a church dating back to the 12th century, with a beautifully decorated 15th-century font and handsome Carolean pulpit and reading desk
Places (158)
Photos (1065)
Memories (6743)
Books (15)
Maps (786)