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 1,601 to 1,620.
Maps
476 maps found.
Books
5 books found. Showing results 1,921 to 5.
Memories
11,058 memories found. Showing results 801 to 810.
I Was Born Here
Seeing this photo brings back many happy memories, on the left of the photo are two black gates and the first cottage next to them is where I was born back in 1955. Shortly afterwards they were demolished and a service road was put in ...Read more
A memory of Twyford in 1955 by
Dukeshouse Wood Camp School (Part Two)
My recollection of a dance that was arranged in the sports hall made me and another lad George Bishop decide to abstain from the proceedings as I think at the time, in fact I am sure about myself that I was very ...Read more
A memory of Hexham in 1940 by
White City/Newburn Road.
We came to live at 12 Hewley Crescent in 1950. My gran, Mrs Knight, lived on Newburn Road, at that time she only had gas lighting and cooking. She had electricity installed in 1955 for the FA Cup on TV, she had a house-full ...Read more
A memory of Throckley in 1950 by
This Stile
I was seven when we moved to Wordsley and we lived at 3 Hope Street. I remember walking up to this stile many times, with my mum and brother, and later when I came up here to play in the woods on my own with friends. Many times when we ...Read more
A memory of Wordsley in 1955
Caerau Square
Looking at this photo of the Square at Caerau brings back some happy memories of when the steam train would pass over the bridge in all its glory with the steam coming out of its funnel. The big billboard before the bridge was the only ...Read more
A memory of Caerau in 1955 by
Orange Hill Girls Grammar School
After passing the 11+ at St Johns School, Milton Road, West Hendon, I attended Orange Hill from 1947. I had quite a journey, having to take the trolleybus along the Edgware Road then a walk down the Watling Avenue ...Read more
A memory of Burnt Oak by
Haydon Pit Wheel
Every morning from 1968 when my family moved to 2 Grovewood Road, I was woken by the pit wheel and watched it from my bedroom window until its closure 1973. It was in direct view straight up through the first straight of Grovewood. ...Read more
A memory of Radstock in 1968 by
The Day A Lorry Drove Into Nellie Englands Cottage
Do you remember the bridge at the beginning of Hithermoor Road (near the rec). It was really high and every car BUMPED over. One day a lorry lost control and ended up in Nellie England's garden (Southern Cottages) !!
A memory of Stanwell Moor by
No Paths
I can remember moving into our house in Rivermill in 1958. The houses had only just been built. There were no paths leading up to the houses or pavements and roads. It was a wonderful feeling even for a child of three to be walking into a freshly built house that no one else had lived in.
A memory of Harlow in 1958 by
Caddington
I remember as a lad, when Elm Avennue was split in two,where the bungalows start there was a solid bar across the road,and the same in the Crescent. You could only get the bus at the Green, the 360, it was sixpence to Luton, and the bus ...Read more
A memory of Caddington in 1960 by
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Captions
5,036 captions found. Showing results 1,921 to 1,944.
The Gothic-style monument at the end of the road is still in place; it is a drinking fountain presented to the town by the Hon Mark Rolle in 1870. The building on the left is the town hall.
The road leading to the Dee estuary is relatively peaceful in 1960, and the roundabout, resplendent with flower beds, is a reminder of earlier civic pride in such innovations.
Few would dare to venture onto the roads in the vulnerable contraption driven by the man on the right.
Set back from the road edge is a substantial 17th-century farmhouse; we can just see its large chimney stack with grouped diagonal shafts.
The thatched Brown's farm, on Willisham Road, was one of several in the area owned by Jack Gibbons.
Boroughbridge probably saw its best days when it was a coaching town for traffic on the Great North Road and had no fewer than twenty-two inns. This picture shows the 14-bed Three Greyhounds Hotel.
This photograph shows Victoria Road and the approach to Bank Top railway station.
The only traffic is a horse-drawn conveyance in this view of the cross-roads village on a ridge of the High Weald above the River Rother. Today, Stonegate is close to the Bewl Bridge Reservoir.
It was the gateway to the Sychnant Pass, the mountain road to Conwy and the Fairy Glen.
Inns and restaurants such as the Old Plough and the White Horse (left) served the travelling public on the Great North Road until a bypass was built for the A1 to the west of the village.
A farm van fords the river on the back road to Hinxton from Duxford. The footbridge is often in use when there are flash floods. Further upstream is a watermill that is still in working order.
This is an excellent view showing the protective measures taken to try and prevent the road (and houses!) being washed away by the more ferocious storms.
New Road Side is here still a street of small, traditional shops.
His mock-Tudor designs were chosen for the redevelopment of Commercial Square during the 1920s, and his foray into Art Deco can still be seen at Clive Court in nearby Sydney Road.
Near the Madron-Morvah road in Cornwall, this Neolithic burial chamber was restored in 1824 when the capstone fell to the ground during a storm.
A few miles south of Truro, Feock is picturesquely situated at the junction of the Carrick Roads with Restronguet Creek. Its Victorian church, St Feoca, has a detached tower.
These children may well have been from the old National School, built on nearby St Thomas Road in 1840. There is an odd division between the well-dressed children (teacher's pets, perhaps?)
On the left-hand side of the road we can see the Ship inn, and also a sign for Regent petrol. One wonders how busy this petrol station would have been in those days, just 40 years ago!
Not to be outdone, the chemist just across the road proclaims that his establishment is the largest in the world. Harrogate had become a fashionable town noted for its fine shops and rich teas.
Beyond Hounslow, the Great West Road divided into the two coaching routes leading to Bath and Exeter.
Talbot Road was developed by Thomas Clifton to link his estate at Layton with the Promenade. When he died, Thomas bequeathed Talbot Square to the town.
The town lies just inside the Dartmoor National Park alongside the main Exeter to Plymouth road. Once stage coaches thundered through, forcing bystanders onto the narrow pavements.
Bedford Street is another road that disappeared from the map following the blitz.
Set a short distance away from the Cromer to Norwich road, Aldborough offers a spacious prospect with cottages grouped round a broad green.
Places (26)
Photos (14329)
Memories (11058)
Books (5)
Maps (476)