Places
23 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Four Elms, Kent
- Elm, Cambridgeshire
- Great Elm, Somerset
- Mile Elm, Wiltshire
- Four Elms, Devon
- Marshall's Elm, Somerset
- Walton Elm, Dorset
- Elm Park, Essex
- Elm Hill, Dorset
- Nine Elms, Wiltshire
- Bocking's Elm, Essex
- Elm Corner, Surrey
- Elm Cross, Wiltshire
- Piff's Elm, Gloucestershire
- Cold Elm, Hereford & Worcester
- Pole Elm, Hereford & Worcester
- Gadfield Elm, Hereford & Worcester
- Four Mile Elm, Gloucestershire
- Nine Elms, Greater London
- Elms Green, Hereford & Worcester (near Leominster)
- Elms Green, Hereford & Worcester (near Stanford Bridge)
- Sutton in the Elms, Leicestershire
- Coton in the Elms, Derbyshire
Photos
117 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
132 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
231 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Noddy's Shop
I moved to Elm Park in 1960 when I was 4 years old with my mum and dad, from Hackney, East London. My dad owned and ran the Newsagents in Station Parade and we lived in the flat above the shop. I remember it was next to the green grocers, ...Read more
A memory of Elm Park by
Royal Standard
I used to live in the Royal Standard pub as a child on Elm road when we moved in a car come straight through the window cannot believe it's now a funeral home
A memory of Wisbech by
When I Was A Child
My father was born in Great Bedwyn, his name Arthur Maurice Hatter. When I was young in 1952 we were invited to stay with a member of his family in 47 High Street, I remember they had a wonderful garden, layered with full flower ...Read more
A memory of Great Bedwyn in 1952 by
My Home Town
My wife moved to Sutton 1950 aged 4, now aged 60 and living in Norfolk we are rekindling memories of such a warm and inviting town. Memories come flooding back. The railway station, the cinema, the old tree outside Trueforms where my wife ...Read more
A memory of Sutton in 1963 by
The Harbour Line.
Look carefully between the first two trees on the left of the photograph. In the gap with the house in the background you will see a horizontal dark line which follows to the right. This is the railway line called the Harbour Line ...Read more
A memory of Wisbech
Cooling Castle Farm
To the right of the photograph is a driveway into the interior of the original castle that was the entrance to Castle Farm operated by F.Elms & Sons and in particular my uncle Harry Elms. He bought the Farm in about 1930 having ...Read more
A memory of Cooling in 1955 by
Life In Cannich And Fasnakyle
My family and I moved from Elm Park in Essex to Scotland in the last weeks of 1948. My father, Leon A. Lalonde, had accepted a position as Chief Mechanical Engineer with John Cochrane and Sons, a construction company. ...Read more
A memory of Glen Affric in 1949 by
School Days
I remember perrin road infants and juniorschool. I started school After easter 1953. My first real memory is being taken around the streets of Wembley. Miss Law was the headmistress of the infants and our classrooms were cabins the ...Read more
A memory of Wembley by
We Emigrated To Australia In 1963 From Sandiacre
I was about 5 when my mum and dad moved us to Sandiacre from Nth Wingfield around 1955, we Loved our new council house in Coronation Avenue, my grandma and grandad lived in the first house on the corner ...Read more
A memory of Sandiacre by
My Boyhood Memories. With My Grandad
I hope that anyone left of my family can read this, as now being 72 , I lost all track of coming to Kent. My home town was Lytham St Annes where my mother lived and dad was in the RAF and met my mother there. My ...Read more
A memory of Faversham by
Captions
76 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
From 1935 the station and the Broadway were the hub of the Elm Park Estate. The Grays Co-operative Society shops on the right are now the Post Office and Elm Park Pharmacy.
The tree we see here in front of St Andrew's church was an elm that suffered from Dutch elm disease in the 1960s and had to be cut down.
These elms trees fell victim to the scourge of the Dutch elm disease in the 1970s.
The road over the bridge leads to Layston church via the elm-lined Causeway. Sad to tell, the avenue fell victim to Dutch elm disease.
Elms once lined the drive, but these, like hundreds of others, succumbed to Dutch elm disease. They have been replaced with lime trees.
Elms once lined the drive, but these, like hundreds of others, succumbed to Dutch elm disease. They have been replaced with lime trees.
It remains unchanged today, but the shapely elm tree in the background has gone, presumably a victim of Dutch elm disease.
It remains unchanged today, but the shapely elm tree in the background has gone, presumably a victim of Dutch elm disease.
Around the corner in Elms Road (which retains many of its mid-Victorian villas) is the Henry Thornton School, within the same site as the Marianne Thornton (C327056) and also part of the Clapham Centre
The great elm in the Square presides over village activity.
The fine avenue of elm trees on the left suffered greatly from the ravages of Dutch Elm Disease in the 1970s.
Once a large elm stood close by, but this was lost during the problems with Dutch elm disease. The area around is now built up and lies in the outskirts of Harlow.
Here we see the village green in Elm, with its recently erected memorial to the men of the village who fell in the Great War.
The old elm tree stands in the village square. It was felled in the 1980s after it became dangerous and replaced with an oak tree in 1986. The Bell Inn is behind the tree.
The mature tree (left), a 200-year-old English elm, succumbed to fungal infection spread by bark beetles as Dutch Elm Disease ravaged the countryside in the early 1970s.
The elm trees lasted until the 1970s when an epidemic of Dutch elm disease killed them. In the distance, on the left, is Elmsleigh, a fine house of the 1860s, now demolished.
The long avenue of elms ran to Roundway Estate. Unfortunately, this area is now threatened by developers.
The elms on the left of Chapel Lane were removed in 1975 because of the ravages of Dutch elm disease.
This street was named after an elm tree just up the quaintly cobbled street round to the left. The street contains a variety of old buildings, from Tudor to Georgian.
Next door is The Elm Tree Inn, formerly The Salutation, and dating from the 17th century. The elm tree in front was removed in 1826.
The original 18th-century nucleus around the High Street and the church was still enclosed by orchards and elms in 1950, and Georgian houses still overlook a green.
Before the opening of the Churchill Road in the 1960s the main route from Wisbech to Outwell was through the Market Place onto Church Terrace, then along West Street or Norfolk Street before joining the Elm
All the buildings in this view survive, including the smaller houses in Elms Avenue and the rather good 1850s stucco of the Belle Vue Hotel, with its arched ground floor windows and heavy moulded cornice
Hoskins was also responsible for designing the Grammar School of Queen Elizabeth (1875), John Pease's villa Elm Ridge (1867), the New Hippodrome and Palace of Varieties (1907), and the King's Head.
Places (23)
Photos (117)
Memories (231)
Books (0)
Maps (132)