Maps

517 maps found.

Books

26 books found. Showing results 1,945 to 1,968.

Memories

4,713 memories found. Showing results 811 to 820.

A Yokels Tale

A Personal Recollection of growing up during the last days of the pedestrian era in rural England by Tom Thornton A Yokel's Tale My earliest recollection of my Thornton grandparents, Alice and Tom, dates back to my pre-school ...Read more

A memory of Owslebury in 1941 by Tom Thornton

Grandmothers House

I loved the Humberstone village and living with my grandmother. I went to Humberstone School. Her name was Maggie Hunt. I would love to hear her and her friends singing all those pub songs at the P lough and The Windmill. ...Read more

A memory of Humberstone in 1953 by Janice Goding

Growing Up In Morgans Terrace

I was born in 1932 at 5 Morgan's Terrace and soon thereafter moved to No 18. There were 7 people living at that address, my maternal Grandfather John Lewis, my maternal Uncle Donald Lewis, my mother Greta Emmanuel, ...Read more

A memory of Pontrhydyfen in 1930 by Rhys John Emmanuel

Hq 90 Group

I spent most of 1952 at R.A.F. Medmenham and very much enjoyed my stay there. By then discipline had begun to be relaxed and we were able to wear civilian clothes off duty.. I was even able to bring my bicycle from home which opened ...Read more

A memory of Medmenham in 1952 by Roy Carne

Once Upon A Time

I lived in Gate Cottage for 2 years after my parents moved there from Surrey. They moved to return to dad's home county and to be close to my uncle and aunt who lived in Holt Street, Nonington. At one time there were 10 Packers ...Read more

A memory of Frogham in 1967 by Laurie Packer

Richard Moss Samuel Nott B 1811

Ancestors Richard Moss and his cousin Samuel Nott were from Sible Hedingham according to the 1841 and 1851 census. Richard was a brick maker and carter. Are there any traces of these family still in the village? They relocated to Rotherham before 1840 but I'd like to trace Richard's ancestors.

A memory of Sible Hedingham in 1860 by Ged Moss

Melrose Cottage 8 Shalbourne

In the 1950s and early 1960s my brother and I were fostered to a Miss Little and her sister at 8 Shalborne, there were several children living there and I have many fond memories of our stay. We used to sleep in a ...Read more

A memory of Shalbourne by Rob Barnett

Coming To Devon

We were living in Barry Island in south Wales, I was getting ready to take the 11 plus, one day when I came home from school my dad was waiting to tell me that we were on the move to Devon. We had spent four years on the Nells ...Read more

A memory of East Prawle in 1946 by Patricia Perring

Newbottle Village

I remember coming from school and running up to the hillside fields helping Wheightman to load the hay onto his tractors and building the haystacks on North Pasture, off down to the yard pond looking for frogs and newts ...Read more

A memory of Newbottle in 1956 by Richard Leadbitter

Memories

I went to Northmoor back in the 1940s and stayed with my parents' friends Mrs Bastable and her family for 6 weeks. The house was thatched and just across the way from a line of trees called "The Causeway". I remember going to ...Read more

A memory of Northmoor in 1940 by Joyce Heathfield (Nee Hove

Captions

5,033 captions found. Showing results 1,945 to 1,968.

Caption For Sway, Post Office C1955

The local shop can be as important to the social life of a village community as the public house.

Caption For Portscatho, The Harbour 1895

This archetypal fishing village was once entirely dependent on the mackerel shoals for its precarious economy.

Caption For Golant, The Village 1901

Perched among orchards on steep wooded slopes above the Fowey river, this picturesque village is renowned for cider making.

Caption For Biddenden, The Village 1901

The village is still celebrated on Easter Monday as the home of the Maids of Biddenden, Eliza and Mary Chulkhurst, two Tudor Siamese twins joined at the shoulders and hips, who lived for thirty-four

Caption For Aberdare, The Memorial, Victoria Square C1955

At the beginning of the 19th Century Aberdare was a village within an agricultural district.

Caption For Colchester, St Boltolph's Priory 1892

Originally a separate village, Lexden is now absorbed in Colchester's south-western expan- sion, but its identity is still clear with the church at its heart.

Caption For Grindleton, The Village And Post Office 1921

At the time of this photograph, the population of the village had almost halved: local cottage industries had declined, and the arrival of the new mills in the larger towns meant that people flocked there

Caption For Eastleigh, Market Street C1955

Originally a village, Eastleigh expanded rapidly around Bishopstoke Junction after the London and South Western Railway Company's carriage works moved here in 1889-90, followed by the locomotive workshops

Caption For Blanchland, The Village C1935

Forced to sell for financial reasons, Tom and Dorothy Forster sold the village to Lord Crewe, Bishop of Durham, and their aunt's husband.

Caption For Prestbury, The Village 1896

Above the entrance is a gallery, and it was from here that a parson, ejected from the church by the Commonwealth, used to preach to the villagers. The house later became a bank.

Caption For Staintondale, Camping Coaches C1960

Nowadays there are modern holiday villages here with streamlined caravans, cottages and chalets all around this lovely area. Nearby there is now a large shire horse farm.

Caption For Geddington, Village 1922

Contrast and compare this photograph with the 1950s images of Geddington, and you can see that the village has hardly changed at all in the intervening years.

Caption For Rushton, Village C1955

The village of Rushton is mentioned as Riston or Risetone in the Domesday Book.

Caption For Newnham, Romer Arms C1955

At the west end of the village there is a small green along the Badby Road.

Caption For Minster In Thanet, High Street C1955

This view shows R E Attwell's to the right, which was the village newsagent's and tobacconist's; the proprietor was Chairman of Minster Parish Council.

Caption For Newton Poppleford, The Village C1965

At the west end of the village, the antiques business is no more, but the building survives intact. It carries the plaque: 'Ye Olde Tolle House 1758'.

Caption For Hockley, Coppice Road And Post Office C1960

Today the little village if Hockley has been absorbed by nearby Poynton.

Caption For Coggeshall, Stoneham Street C1965

Here we see the pretty centre of Coggeshall, an attractive village now given over to the antiques trade. It was once a prosperous wool town, and famed for its lace.

Caption For Carn Brea, The Monument 1891

They consist of possibly the oldest known Neolithic village in England, and are dated about 3700BC.

Caption For Trefriw, Llyn Cowlyd C1950

The lonely grandeur of the Snowdonia mountains is emphasised in stark monochrome in this lake set high above the village on the flank of the Conwy Valley.

Caption For Thurlestone, The Village 1918

Despite some garish mod- ern buildings and the large golf course nearby, Thurlestone remains the attractive village we see here in 1918.

Caption For Solihull, High Street 1968

In 1885 Solihull was described as a 'very pleasant village, but a few miles distant'.

Caption For Leece, The Tarn 2003

The village is built round a green and a tarn, which is inhabited by wildlife. The former smithy still has a rural use – it is now occupied by agricultural engineers.

Caption For Little Dunmow, The Street C1955

When the Flitch ceremony still took place in Little Dunmow, successful claimants were paraded through the village in the Flitch Chair.