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 1,521 to 1,540.
Maps
18 maps found.
Books
13 books found. Showing results 1,825 to 13.
Memories
4,612 memories found. Showing results 761 to 770.
Childhood Memories
In August 1939 I came to Roadwater from Kingston, Surrey to stay with my grandparents for my summer school holidays. My grandmother's name was Eva Morse and my grandfather's Rupert Morse. At that time they lived in a house that ...Read more
A memory of Roadwater in 1930 by
Eversley, 1971 1983
Dear Jan, I have found this website quite by chance! I first moved to Eversley with my family as a child (aged 6) in July 1971. My mother became the sub postmistress and we lived in the purpose build, red brick 5 bedroomed house ...Read more
A memory of Eversley by
My Granddad Stevens
Years ago my grandad had a small garage and workshop at the side of the Du-Cane Arms. My dad was born there and went to scool at Great Tottom. My grandad is buried in Great Braxted Church and my nanna is there too. In the ...Read more
A memory of Great Braxted in 1900 by
My Memories Of Quince Tree House, South Road.
Hi I was born in Orsett Cottage Hospital in 1955 and I lived with my parents at my grandparent's house - Quince Tree House on South Road. until we moved to Hillingdon, Middlesex when I was 2. My ...Read more
A memory of South Ockendon by
Conkers And The Pram Race
Hello, my name is David Clarke. I lived in Barlborough from 1972 to 1978. We lived at 12 Westbridge Rd during that time frame. I went to Barlborough Primary School and so did my brother until my family moved to the U.S. in ...Read more
A memory of Barlborough by
My Time At Cholderton 1957 1960
I was very young around 5 I believe when I lived there. My Father (Jim) who was a motor engineer ran the Parkhouse Garage where my mother (Eileen) also ran a Cafe. There was a small garden pond in the front garden ...Read more
A memory of Cholderton by
1958
I lived in this house for a year in 1958 when my father was stationed at RAF Wethersfield. We spent a good deal of time in the kitchen as the warmest room in the house. When spring came it was lovely in the back garden with snowdrops and ...Read more
A memory of Great Easton
Uncle Trevor
My mum was taken in during WW II as a young girl to move her out of London. She lived with Trevor Gawler and his wife until the refugee kids were sent back to the big city. My mum loved it in the countryside and didn’t want to ...Read more
A memory of Hazelbury Bryan by
My Childhood In Burton In The 50's And 60's
I was born in the village in 1949, in an end terrace No.1 Woodview. It was down a small road in the centre of the village and at the top, I believe at one time there was a timber yard/sawmill. The ...Read more
A memory of Burton in Lonsdale by
Brimscombe Corner & Burleigh 1910 62690
This photo is taken 100 yards up Brimscombe lane, looking back across the Golden Valley. The lane itself leads back up to Thrupp Lane & Dark lane, which is on its way to Quarhouse and the Lypiatt Manor, (the ...Read more
A memory of Brimscombe by
Captions
5,016 captions found. Showing results 1,825 to 1,848.
Uley Bury, from where this view was photographed, is acclaimed the most spectacular Iron Age hill- fort in the Cotswolds.
After the railway came to Mundesley in 1898, it was anticipated that the village would be as popular as Cromer.
This was the thatched lodge gate from the village street to the Hall. It dates from the 1840s, when Sir Henry Bunbury created the park around the Hall.
This early photograph of Castleton at the head of the Hope Valley shows the intricate network of drystone walls which surrounds the village.
Most cottages here were built in the century from 1750, and accommodated coal miners. Other trades here included spinning and weaving.
The largest seaside town in West Sussex, Worthing began to grow as a fashionable resort towards the end of the 18th century.
G E Street restored the church 1852-61. The building on the right may have been a tithe barn. Note that the village is well above flood level.
As the town grew further away from the village and the parish church, a new Anglican place of worship was necessary.
The Roman road of Stane Street bisects the village of Billingshurst. The shop of W J Barnes (on the left) stands on the causeway; it was formerly the old family shop of Joseph Luxford, a carrier.
The houses on Pennine View are from a different era to the ones we saw in D210004, and catering for more modern workers.
One of Cleveland's famous landmarks, the old church stands on the site of earlier Saxon and Norman churches.
Yetminster rather resembles one of those lovely stone built villages in the Cotswolds, and has an unusual look for a Dorset settlement.
The original church was Norman, but was removed to make way for a larger one built by the Knights Templars.
Back inthe Chess Valley we reach Latimer, a very pretty village with a triangular green and, uphill to the west, Latimer House.
A small village on minor roads near to the Surrey border.The church of St Mary Magdalene has two historic 14th-century brasses.
Clinging to the steep escarpment below Leith Hill, this village centre is, at 750ft, the highest in Surrey.
This quiet village was once on the main route up Swaledale, and had a Temperance Hotel and a smithy. A new road bypassed the village, and it has reverted back to its secluded charms.
The River Arrow meanders over a wide flood plain and most villages in the area sit well above its banks. However Eardisland, for some reason, is situated right beside the river.
This is a small hilltop village about a mile to the south east of expanding Fleckney.
Godshill is one of the most photographed villages in England, with a wealth of fine thatched cottages.
This is something of a misnomer, as in reality there is no such village. The fact is that there are two villages, Hutton and Cranswick, which are less than a mile apart.
Heading south-west towards Banbury, we now reach Upper Boddington, close to the Warwickshire border.
Robertsbridge is a medieval village near the Kent border. There is no church in the village, the nearest being at Salehurst.
An isolated village of flint and brick cottages, to the west of Chichester. In the village are Adsdean, a gabled Tudor style house of around 1850, and the church of St Mary, built in 1859.
Places (5)
Photos (9649)
Memories (4612)
Books (13)
Maps (18)