Places
3 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
68 photos found. Showing results 1,681 to 68.
Maps
12 maps found.
Books
15 books found. Showing results 2,017 to 15.
Memories
7,548 memories found. Showing results 841 to 850.
Summer 1980
My memories of the heath are from 1980 when my mother - Kathleen (Topsy) Whybrow and father bought me and my brother to the heath in the summer of 1980 for five months. My parents had emigrated to NZ and gave myself and my brother ...Read more
A memory of Hatfield Heath in 1980 by
Stepping Back In Time
It started when my mother was dying, when we asked her about the family history, and she gave us names and dates. Her family came from France in late 1500. They were Hugenots and they were Puritans, and were chased out of ...Read more
A memory of Cinderford in 1995 by
The 50s At School
I remember starting school at the 'old' school and then after 3 years moving to the new school - it seemed huge and daunting and many of us got lost in the first few weeks. Pyrford was great to grow up in then - we had fields to roam ...Read more
A memory of Pyrford in 1959 by
The Old Bell Hotel
Well not my memories exactly, but those from my father's diaries. He was John Welch and married a Peggie Richens who had grown up in Warminster. They married in the Minster Church and he left immediately for the war. When he came ...Read more
A memory of Warminster in 1940 by
The Capitol Cinema
I used to look forward to the weekend so I could pay my 'tanner' and go to the Saturday morning pictures at the Capitol (now Marks & Spencer I believe). I was born and raised in Barking, Sutton Road (off Movers Lane). Went to ...Read more
A memory of Barking in 1956 by
Walks
Brockworth oh Brockworth, what a lovely village! I grew up there and my dad used to take my brother Melvyn and I for walks up the hill. Castle Hill and Coopers Hill. I remember walks from 1975 onwards, especially on the lower slopes of Coopers ...Read more
A memory of Brockworth in 1975 by
Days Of My Childhood
As young children my nanna would frequently walk my sister and I up to the Arno to play in the rough ground behind the rose garden. That was way back in the 1950's. She would sit and spend quiet time in the gardens whilst we ran ...Read more
A memory of Birkenhead by
Part Of My Childhood
I spent many enjoyable school holidays in this town. My Uncle had a store called Staggs the Drapery and clothing store. Back then we used to spend many an hour wandering over to the Quay & the Priory. We also used to ...Read more
A memory of Christchurch in 1953 by
Howards Close
I was born at 23 Howard Close in October 1963. It was a lovely place for children to grow up. A large green and a playground, little traffic, dogs and other residents. Everyone looked out for one another. I attended the infant ...Read more
A memory of Walton on the Hill in 1963 by
My Grandad Jim
My name is Kerry & my favourite memory of Coalville when I was younger is my Grandad, his name was Jim Watts. He was a coal miner for quite a few years & he was also Mayor of Coalville. I remember going to the dog track with ...Read more
A memory of Coalville by
Captions
2,501 captions found. Showing results 2,017 to 2,040.
One of the finest medieval gateways in the country, Southampton's Bargate dates back to the late 12th century.
Bargate was originally built to guard the main road into Southampton. Over the years it has been a toll-gate, prison, guildhall and museum.
A similar view again highlighting school buildings and the church. The large house on the left has been built on South Back Way with a pleasant southerly aspect and a spacious garden.
One of the finest medieval gateways in the country, Southampton's Bargate dates back to the late 12th century.
This is the same scene as photograph No L117026 taken from a little further back.
This little church, dedicated to St Peter and St Paul, sits on the edge of Romney Marshes; its origins go back to the 12th century.
The Red Lion, seen on the right, is the oldest inn in Adderbury, dating back to the 16th century. Situated on the main Oxford Road, it became a coaching inn, and today it is a hotel.
We are looking back the other way from R16047, with Sparks bakery and restaurant next door to the local branch of W H Smith (left).
A fish 'jouster' or seller loads his trap with baskets packed with the latest catch. He will tour the local villages, travelling perhaps as far as Helston with his wares.
The view looks towards Morton Crescent and Alexandra Terrace. A century earlier this part of Exmouth was just a strand, backed by dunes, marsh and pasture.
The Chequers Hotel, beside which is a line of cars, is one of Newbury's most famous businesses. Though almost entire- ly rebuilt, some of the original walling remains.
The pub and shop go back hundreds of years. This is a large village with a number of neat houses. It is close to the River Wissey and the main road to London.
Taken from a position further back than 80576 (note the arches probably added in the 19th century that have since been removed).
The pub is called the Old Bush Inn. This is an old name for a pub; it dates back to times when the brewer would hang a bit of a bush over the front door to advertise that a new brew was ready.
There had been a church dedicated to St Werburgh, daughter of the King of Mercia, at Warburton before the Normans.
Its inn sits about a mile away looking out over the River Severn with its back to the road - in fact, it was originally built to serve boatmen travelling along the river, but no-one comes that way now.
A close-up showing the foundations of the original Chapter House dating back to the early 18th century.
The building with the jettied gables to the left dates back to the 17th century, on the face of it one of the oldest buildings in St Ives, although earlier buildings survive behind more modern facades.
Chesapeake Mill dates back to 1820 and was built by John Prior, a miller, partly of woodwork from an American warship of that name, captured by the much smaller British HMS 'Shannon' off Boston Harbour
Back in the Market Place, the clock tower is an architecturally undistinguished brick structure with a stone plaque telling us that its foundation stone was laid on 26 January 1899.
Thurlestone takes its name from a holed, or thirled, rock just out at sea in Bigbury Bay, which was mentioned in a Saxon charter way back in 845.
Corporation Street was the last major roadway development in the city centre made by the corporation.
The town council still holds its meetings at the 17th-century Town Hall - note its open loggia. The building is owned and maintained by a charitable trust.
Although originally captioned 'Holker Hall', this photograph actually shows one of the houses on the Holker Hall estate, which has been in the hands of the Cavendish family for over 200 years and is
Places (3)
Photos (68)
Memories (7548)
Books (15)
Maps (12)