Places
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Photos
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Maps
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Memories
1,544 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Elliotts Fish & Chip Shop, High Street, Hogsthorpe.
Hi I was born in 1963 in Hogsthorpe and went to the primary school in Thames Street, I remember some amazing times in Hogsthorpe helping my Mum and Dad in the fish and chip shop rumbling the potato's with ...Read more
A memory of Hogsthorpe by
Larner And Mustoe Families
I am very interested in Northleach because my family connections, the Mustoes and Larners, go back several hundred years there and certainly in the case of the Larners back to the 1600's. Both families were shepherds and ...Read more
A memory of Northleach by
1944 Vi Flying Bomb
This isn't really a memory because I was too young at the time. I was born in a timber bungalow called "Midway" on Lowford Hill, Bursledon in April 1942. Dad was working at the Follands aircraft factory at that time, building war ...Read more
A memory of Bursledon by
Memories Of My Widnes School Days
Having lived the first 25 years of my life in Widnes ,I have many happy memories of my school days there. Born in Dundalk Lane in 1940, from 1943 until 1945, I attended the Nursery,situated next to Ditton County Infants’ ...Read more
A memory of Widnes by
Francis Frith Murderer Of Eyam
I am astonished that this collection is Francis Frith and I am assuming it is a coincidence that I found it when looking up Francis Frith of Eyam. Francis Frith was a resident of Eyam in Derbsyhire. He and his wife were ...Read more
A memory of Eyam by
Queen's Coronation
I can remember celebrating the Coronation with a party, the streets were decorated with flags, it was a memorable day and photographs were taken, which I still have. I can name nearly everyone, friends and neighbours. I no ...Read more
A memory of Llanbradach in 1953 by
Post War Harlesden.
I was born in Tredegar, South Wales in April 1941. My mother had been evacuated to that small welsh town when she fell pregnant with me in 1940. We lived with her parents. My dad was away doing War things. We moved back to London ...Read more
A memory of Harlesden by
Family Connections.
The couple on the right pavement are my grandparents George Gray and his wife Elizabeth (nee Phippen) of Thornford. The photo would have been taken on a Thursday because after his retirement they always travelled to Sherborne on ...Read more
A memory of Sherborne by
Great Schooldays!!
I was born in 1943 in Mancot and lived in Shotton. After the eleven plus I arrived at Hawarden Grammar school. The first two years were easy enough but in Form3, I noticed all the boys studied Science and all the girls had to take Arts ...Read more
A memory of Hawarden by
Princes Road
I was born in 1953 at 71 Princes Road, in 1955 we moved to 10 Church Road where I lived until 1969 when I left home. I went to Princes Road Boys school where Mr Carr was the Head and some of the teachers were Miss Gardiner, Mrs ...Read more
A memory of Buckhurst Hill by
Captions
137 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
In 1931, the widow of Stafford Bourne (the son of one of the founders of Bourne & Hollingsworth's store in London) sold Garston Manor to Benskins the brewers, who transferred it to the North West Metropolitan
Heading south towards Bourne, the route diverts north-east of the town to Edenham, a delightful village on the east bank of the winding East Glen River, whose church has many remarkable monuments to the
Heading south towards Bourne, the route diverts north-east of the town to Edenham, a delightful village on the east bank of the winding East Glen River, whose church has many remarkable monuments to the
Charming thatched cottages on Bourn's High Street.
The Bourne stream runs through the area of Lower, Middle and Upper Bourne, joining the River Wey at Moor Park.
Bourne, at the junction where two Roman roads met, had a Roman station to guard the Car Dyke, the great Roman dyke 56 miles long and still surviving for long stretches.
This picture should more properly be captioned 'The Bourne from Besbury.'
Bourne, at the junction where two Roman roads met, had a Roman station to guard the Car Dyke, the great Roman dyke 56 miles long and still surviving for long stretches.
Though smarter and more affluent today, much of St Mary Bourne is as it was when this photograph was taken.
Taken from the end of the promenade by the Bourne Arms, the scene shows the once-busy steam ferry arriving from Fleetwood across the Wyre estuary.
Bournemouth's Square stands at the very heart of the town astride the River Bourne.
This view looks north along the A15 towards the church of St Guthlac and Bourne.
The Golden Lion, possibly an 18th-century pub, faces the lane that leads up to Bourn Hall.
This was once a place where sheep were washed in a stream (bourne), hence the name.
In 1810, Lewis Tregonwell built a holiday home on lonely heathland, close to the mouth of the tiny River Bourne. Other
This is a lovely environment for children to go to school; here they have been photographed during their break.
The Primitive Methodist movement was officially founded in Tunstall, in 1811, by Hugh Bourne and William Clowes.
Bournemouth's Square stands at the very heart of the town astride the River Bourne.
A neat Austin 8 is here heading for St Mary Bourne.
East of Marlow, where the river bends south, Townsend's and Shaw's boatyards and their wharves were a focus of boating activity in the heyday of the late Victorian and Edwardian boating boom.
In 1823 John Butcher, a preacher from Bolton, was landed by fishing boat at Derby Haven and brought Primitive Methodism to the island.
The suburbs of Bournemouth, which have now sprawled out into the neighbouring countryside, began with the early construction of villa residences, each with its own garden - as suggested by Dr Granville
Its name, the white bourne, means the white stream.
Apart from the areas around the mouth of the Bourne Stream, much of Bournemouth was built to the rear of the long line of cliffs, necessitating many stairways down to the beach for energetic visitors
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