Places
26 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Cemmaes Road, Powys
- Six Road Ends, County Down
- Road Weedon, Northamptonshire
- Severn Road Bridge, Gloucestershire
- Roade, Northamptonshire
- Berkeley Road, Gloucestershire
- Harling Road, Norfolk
- Road Green, Devon
- Builth Road, Powys
- Cross Roads, Yorkshire
- Steele Road, Borders
- Cross Roads, Devon
- Four Roads, Dyfed
- Road Green, Norfolk
- Biggar Road, Strathclyde
- Clarbeston Road, Dyfed
- Five Roads, Dyfed
- Eccles Road, Norfolk
- Grampound Road, Cornwall
- Morchard Road, Devon
- Wood Road, Greater Manchester
- Four Roads, Isle of Man
- St Columb Road, Cornwall
- Clipiau, Gwynedd (near Cemmaes Road)
- New Road Side, Yorkshire (near Silsden)
- New Road Side, Yorkshire (near Cleckheaton)
Photos
14,329 photos found. Showing results 1,561 to 1,580.
Maps
476 maps found.
Books
5 books found. Showing results 1,873 to 5.
Memories
11,058 memories found. Showing results 781 to 790.
Looking Back To The Early Days
I was born in rented 'rooms' at Wordsworth Road in 1936 and came to move with my parents to five different addresses at Easington before I moved away from the area, when I married in 1963. But although my ...Read more
A memory of Easington Colliery in 1900 by
Now Living In Egypt
Hi Anthony, I knew your grandmother Ketura and your grandfather Ellis and most of their children. They had a very large family. Your Auntie Margery and I were great friends. We were always getting into trouble for climbing the ...Read more
A memory of Llysfaen in 1960 by
Croydon Thornton Heath And Norbury
I was born and brought up in Croydon and although I now live in the Channel Islands I still regard it as my home. I remember living in Northborough Road, Norbury and attending Norbury Manor Infants School only ...Read more
A memory of Croydon in 1963 by
The Smallfield Brickyard
I was born at 1 Kings Cottages in April 1931. I have two brothers, and as young boys we were close friends of the late Gerald Mitchel. Gerald's mum, nee Doris King, lived with her husband (Syd, who served with the RAF) in ...Read more
A memory of Smallfield in 1930 by
Pinehurst Childrens Home Park Rd Camberley
Memories of Camberley come from my childhood days as an orphan residing at 'Pinehurst', a Surrey County Child Welfare Home 1949-1953. I was put there as a 9-year-old and recall spending a very happy part ...Read more
A memory of Pinehurst in 1949 by
Hare Park Terrace
My uncle and aunt, Frank and Lilian Simpson (nee Wilson)used to live over looking the Spen Valley in a terraced house on a hill at the bottom of which was Rawfolds Mill. Is the photo H199022 this road and is the wall on left the ...Read more
A memory of Rawfolds in 1920 by
Abc Lyric Cinema
I was the Chief Projectionist at the Lyric from approx 1957 until 1963 when I was appointed as Co Chief/Lighting Engineer at the new ABC Blackpool. The Manager at the Lyric was Mr Ron Crabb and when he moved to another ABC ...Read more
A memory of Wellingborough in 1957 by
Lymington In The 1940s
My maternal grandmother and mother were both born in Lymington, my mother attending the grammar school in Brockenhurst (I remember as a small boy her pointing it out to me from the train) In 1944, when the V1 'doodlebugs' ...Read more
A memory of Lymington in 1944 by
A Great Place To Live
Having been born and brought up in Buckhusrt Hill in the 1960s and 1970s and 1980s and now living in Kent, it reminds me what a unique place it once was. My immediate memories are of Lords Bushes and living in Forest ...Read more
A memory of Buckhurst Hill by
Salfords Memories Of A Small Boy
We lived in Salfords from about 1948-1952, at the top of Honeycrock lane. Yes Angela, you did pay in the cubicle in the butcher's and the baker's shop was Cakebread's - very appropriate. I went to the old school, ...Read more
A memory of Salfords in 1948 by
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Captions
5,036 captions found. Showing results 1,873 to 1,896.
The shop on the Old Bristol Road to the right is now a wholesale ice cream and frozen food supplier's.
You can see the local post office on the left of the road with a telephone box outside.
Ingatestone's livelihood came from its position on the London-Chelmsford road. Even the 'stone' in its name may refer to a milestone.
South Road is the main shopping area in Haywards Heath.
Lion Hotel, on the right of the picture, gives its name to the square in the centre of the village, now dominated by traffic in a one-way system.The two cyclists meandering down the middle of the road
Running between the church and Nutfield Road, this narrow cobbled alley, with red tile-hung Tudor buildings approached by red brick steps, was once the High Street of the village.
The road from the village leads to Lodge Park, some two miles away from the spot photographed here.
Today this parade of shops sit by a much busier road than the one we see here.
St Bartholomew's enjoys an elevated position, possibly the site of a prehistoric fort, at the corner of Church Hill and Vicarage Road.
The unmade road leads from the village to the beach. The sand-dunes are covered with marram grass, which helps knit them together and prevent erosion on this windy coast.
Extensive tree cover dropping away onto the Heath now obscures the raised footway, which remains extant, and inevitably a kerb now defines the right-hand side of the road.
Note that the road through Eastcote is exceptionally wide for a small suburban centre.
Now one of the busiest road junctions in the rural region, in 1952 the centre of Woburn was a study in tranquillity.
This wooden bridge lies on the line of the Roman road, Sarn Helen.
When this picture was taken, the road was still unsurfaced and rainwater drainage non- existent. It must have been most unpleasantly muddy after rain or dusty in sunny weather.
Situated to the south of Peel on what is now the A27 road to Colby via Round Table, Glen Maye opens to the sea. It is a great place for those who like to scramble over rocks and paddle in pools.
Liphook expanded as a village thanks to the London-Portsmouth road and the arrival of the railway in 1859.
Twyford is a large village near Winchester, divided by the main road. This tree can be found in St Mary's churchyard.
These buildings were demolished as part of road and pedestrian way development, and a post office and job centre were built in their place.
The minor road off the B1249 rises with dwellings on either side, peaks and falls again to an old wooden bridge with rusted iron railings that crosses brackish water which eventually falls into
Note the clothing drying on the railing and the unmade road.
Great swathes of countryside were cut through to make roads and roundabouts.
Whitworth Brothers Flour Mills stand beside the A509 London Road bridge.
Before the construction of the Senate House in the early 18th century, students received their degrees in the Church of Great St Mary's, whose tower dominates the right-hand side of the road.
Places (26)
Photos (14329)
Memories (11058)
Books (5)
Maps (476)