Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Leitrim Village, Republic of Ireland
- Swanley Village, Kent
- Ewden Village, Yorkshire
- Glentrool Village, Dumfries and Galloway
- Aycliffe Village, Durham
- Clewer Village, Berkshire
- Crookham Village, Hampshire
- Church Village, Mid Glamorgan
- Carn Brea Village, Cornwall
- Elan Village, Powys
- Luccombe Village, Isle of Wight
- North Hinksey Village, Oxfordshire
- Cumeragh Village, Lancashire
- Hulland Village, Derbyshire
- Park Village, Northumberland
- Model Village, Warwickshire
- Outlet Village, Cheshire
- Hansel Village, Strathclyde
- Portlethen Village, Grampian
- Stockbridge Village, Merseyside
- Talbot Village, Dorset
- Abbey Village, Lancashire
- Aber Village, Powys
- Chelmer Village, Essex
- Dog Village, Devon
- Glenprosen Village, Tayside
- Hutton Village, Cleveland
- Heathfield Village, Oxfordshire
- Grange Village, Gloucestershire
- Perkin's Village, Devon
- Mawsley Village, Northamptonshire
- Wynyard Village, Cleveland
- Albert Village, Leicestershire
- Brockhall Village, Lancashire
- Cardrona Village, Borders
- Dutch Village, Essex
Photos
13,159 photos found. Showing results 141 to 160.
Maps
517 maps found.
Books
26 books found. Showing results 169 to 192.
Memories
4,713 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.
Best Four Years Of My Life As A Kid
We moved here in 1978/9 when I was 4 to 8 - St John’s Crescent, and was heartbroken when my parents split 5 years later and we had to move with my mother back to Knaresborough. Lots of lovely memories. The old ...Read more
A memory of Bishop Monkton by
Eastry Childrens Home
I had a wonderful upbringing ‘up the hill’ from Buttshole pond… 1958 - 1966 I was raised in one of the seven cottages- mine was Lime Cottage. My matron was Mrs. Aunty Betty Harris- who had a daughter, ...Read more
A memory of Eastry by
Woofy And The Bungalow.
I was in Founders house 1962 - 64. Mr Gentry (Duck Billed Platypus) was housemaster and Twiggy his wife (thin as a lathe she was). I decided to get into bricklaying and ended up with Mr Cliffe as our building teacher (Woofy) was ...Read more
A memory of Tiffield by
Beginnings
My parents moved from Pentire to Crantock when I was about 3 and Crantock is certainly ingrained in my memory as being my first home. My mother had taken a position as housekeeper to a Dr Nicholas and with it came Rose Cottage. My father ...Read more
A memory of Crantock by
Good Old Days
i lived at 13ward gardens just by the village green.spent my youth there until moving to new zealand when i was 25,spent many a day fishing for sticklebacks in the stream by the pond back in 1964,as i got older spent many an hour in the ...Read more
A memory of Cippenham by
My Home
I have lived in the village all my life, all 29 years of it. I have lived in 3 different cottages, the 1st was opposite the village hall, I am 1 of 4 children and I have many happy memories of living there till just before my 10th ...Read more
A memory of Walton in Gordano in 1982 by
Born And Bred A Jersey Marine Girl
There's alot to be said about Jersey Marine,it will always be home to me. I come from a well known family "Huxtable" and most of them are still there today. I've very fond memories of growing up there, climbing ...Read more
A memory of Jersey Marine in 1974 by
18 Two Meadows
As a Londoner, when my new husband was offered a job in Great Yarmouth in 1964, I was excited, although a bit apprehensive about moving to the small village of Hemsby. We bought a brand new house in a new subdivision at Two Meadows. It ...Read more
A memory of Hemsby by
Upper Heyford School
My father was stationed at RAF Upper Heyford 1949 to 1953. My brothers, Peter, Michael and myself, Mary, went to the village school. My older brother Richard went to school in Steeple Aston. I remember the two ...Read more
A memory of Upper Heyford in 1949 by
Captions
5,033 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.
The village grocer's and newsagent's shop is seen in the foreground here with, immediately to its left, the village post office.
The pretty village of Elham, at the heart of the valley of that name, is clustered around its market square and this High Street, lined with buildings from several periods.
In this carefully composed picture we see the lower part of the village. The two men, one holding the horse and one with his dog, are everything a photographer could want in a village scene.
This small village, about three miles to the east of Loughborough, has in recent decades expanded to accommodate country- dwelling commuters.
The White Horse Inn (facing us, left) is now the last of seven public houses that are said to have once traded in the village; it is remarkable that the local population of so many small
This beautiful village, once famous for its skilled bowmen, stands on the edge of Bowland Forest. The school, built of local limestone, replaced a school which had stood on the Green since 1620.
The tiny and isolated village of Keld stands high up in Swaledale (1100ft), surrounded by beautiful walking country; it is a favourite with lovers of the wild northern dales.
Glandford village was built as a model village by Sir Alfred Jodrell of nearby Bayfield Hall in the late 19th century. He built the church too, reusing material from the derelict medieval church.
Bondgate crosses Mount Pleasant to become the restrained High Street on the south side of the village rising up to Hill Top.
Located at the western extremity of the South Downs, Buriton captures the essence of the traditional English village.
A village inn, the 1930s car, and the shop all seem to have a timeless feel to them; they stand undisturbed on the outskirts of Prestatyn.
On the Scarborough to Driffield road, Langtoft is an increasingly popular Wolds village.
Converted from a Georgian private house, the Village Stores and Post Office was the communal centre of the former West Yorkshire village of Wortley, which is now not much more than a suburb of the city
A charming view of Glynn, a little Irish village about a mile to the south of Larne, on the western edge of Larne Lough. Just to the south of the village are the ruins of the old church.
When suggestions were made in the early 1960s to convert this village green into a formal crossroads, the local Women's Institute galvanised villagers into action and turfed the whole area
The village overlooks the often windswept Rhosili Bay on the western edge of the Gower Peninsula. Tradition has it that the village is named after St Fili, who was possibly a son of St Cenydd.
This village is just one mile from Boston Spa and even less from the Great North Road.
The village overlooks the often windswept Rhosili Bay on the western edge of the Gower Peninsula. Tradition has it that the village is named after St Fili, who was possibly a son of St Cenydd.
East of Malton we find the mostly Victorian village of Rillington - its development followed the arrival of the railway.
Harcourt is taken from Harcourt in Normandy, and from Robert de Harewecurt, who held the village in 1202.
This beautiful village is situated on the Sussex border on a headstream of the Medway river. The village contains a number of fine weatherboarded houses and a school with Tudor timbering.
This shop frontage shows the development of the village shop into the mini-supermarket, ultra-modern for its time.
The building was erected in the 17th century, and now serves as the village`s splendid and recently refurbished youth hostel.
The windowless stone-built village lock-up. A surprising number of these old roundhouse lock-ups survive, many in the villages of neighbouring Derbyshire.
Places (114)
Photos (13159)
Memories (4713)
Books (26)
Maps (517)