Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!

Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.

Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.

During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards

Places

1 places found.

Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Photos

7 photos found. Showing results 21 to 7.

Maps

54 maps found.

1903-1904, River Hodder Ref. RNC817896
1900, Stoke Rivers Ref. RNC840126
1920, Stanford Rivers Ref. POP838255
1919, River Severn Ref. POP818285
1898, Stoke Rivers Ref. RNE840126
1946, River Severn Ref. NPO818285
1945, Rivers' Corner Ref. NPO818650
1896, Stanford Rivers Ref. RNE838255
1899, Wootton Rivers Ref. HOSM65267
1895 - 1896, River Common Ref. HOSM57885
1880 - 1881, Mill River Ref. HOSM45756
1885 - 1901, River Cale Ref. HOSM48984
1898, Stanford Rivers Ref. RNC838255
1901, River Bank Ref. RNC817349
1924, River Hodder Ref. POP817896
1946, Stoke Rivers Ref. NPO840126
1898, River Dart Ref. RNE817568
1896, River Hodder Ref. RNE817896
1898, Rivers' Corner Ref. RNE818650
1946, River Dart Ref. NPO817568

Books

Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.

Memories

119 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.

River Derwent Crossings Brigham Broughton

See http://forums.timesandstar.co.uk

A memory of Brigham by R Musgrave

Where I Was Born

My Beginning, at Sole Street near Cobham Kent. (9th March 1946 - 2nd January 1951) I was born on Saturday March 9th 1946 at 3.29pm at Temperley, The Street, Sole Street, Kent. I was delivered at home by the ...Read more

A memory of Sole Street in 1946

Living In Rye

Hi, I lived in Rye until I went into the army in 1955. I went to the Primary School in Ferry Road, then to the Rye Secondary Modern. When the Seond World War was on we were living at Cadborough, then we moved to Military Road, a ...Read more

A memory of Hastings in 1940 by Stanley Wilson

Hearts Cruisers

This gentleman is my grandfather Geoffrey John Hart. He owned and worked the business, Hearts Cruisers, with his two sons, Dick and Jack, and we spent many a happy hour there. In those days you could swim in the river as ...Read more

A memory of Thorpe St Andrew by Judi Ingram

My Chatham

Born and bred in Grove Road off Luton Road, went to the schools of All Saints and Fort Luton. I found Chatham to be a friendly town with memories of seeing Arther English at the Empire, seaside at the Strand, being a 19th Medway west boy ...Read more

A memory of Chatham by Kenneth Blackman

Marsala Road Ladywell The Prefabs

I was only a few months old when our family moved to 122 Marsala Road, Ladywell in 1949. I was ten years of age when we moved from Ladywell to Dartford in August 1959 but there are many different and varied things ...Read more

A memory of Lewisham in 1958 by Tony Brown

Growing Up In Wonderland

In the mid and late forties I attended Kingsmuir Boarding School in what is known today as Alderford Grange. It was owned and mastered by Ms Francis. We were told that the building had once been the Inn attached to ...Read more

A memory of Sible Hedingham in 1945 by Paul Erland

The Jetty, River Plant

January 1977. The rain was almost horizontal that day, ice cold too, as I walked towards the hut at the delivery wharf of the Ford River Plant in Dagenham, Essex, I thought to myself that it really could not be any worse ...Read more

A memory of Dagenham in 1977 by Dave Weldon

An Idyllic Childhood In New Haw

I wanted to add my own memories of growing up in New Haw from 1965 until moving again in 1973. The family moved from Richmond (then in Middlesex) to 187 New Haw Road, a detached 3-bedroom house with 1/3 acre of ...Read more

A memory of New Haw in 1966 by Andrew Taylor

Fishing In The River Weaver...

The scene of hours of fishing in the Weaver under the bridge..My uncle Pete gave me my first rod when I was about 8, it was a 2 part rod made of a tank aerial (I was told!), solid and heavy with no flexibility whatever, ...Read more

A memory of Hartford by Steve Povall

Captions

80 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.

Caption For Cranbrook, St David's Bridge 1921

The summer of this year is on record as being suffocatingly hot, and this village, like most in Kent, suffered from a completely rainless June and July.

Caption For Maidstone, High Street 1898

Today this large town by the River Medway looks very different. It teems with traffic, and it is the County Town of Kent. A prison that has housed some of Britain's most notorious criminals is nearby.

Caption For Kendal, Stricklandgate 1888

The Town of Kendal Kendal—the 'Auld Grey Town' on the River Kent— was founded on the wealth won from the wool of Lakeland sheep.

Caption For Chilham, The High Street C1955

Pollarded lime trees line part of the High Street of this village, which can justifiably claim to be one of Kent's prettiest; it duly attracts hordes of visitors during the summer season.

Caption For Gravesend, Clifton Marine Parade C1898

We are keeping to the Kent bank of the Thames Estuary as the river reaches Gravesend, beyond the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge at Dartford.

Caption For Staveley, The Village C1955

Similarly, there is no indication of industrial activity; until the 19th century, this was a dominant feature of Staveley, with bobbin and other mills lining the banks of the River Kent.

Caption For Hartfield, 1906

We are on the upper River Medway north of the Ashdown Forest, near the Kent border. The 13th-century church of St Mary is on a knoll in the centre of the village.

Caption For Rye, The River Rother 1901

In the 1190s Rye joined the Cinque Ports federation, a group of Kent and Sussex ports that provided ships for the King's navy in return for enormous privileges.

Caption For Eynsford, C1955

The river flowing beneath the 15th-century bridge is the Darent, which rises near the county boundary with Surrey near Westerham and runs through a myriad of Kent villages to the Thames near Long-reach

Caption For Hadlow, The Post Office Corner C1960

In this village churchyard there is a 19th-century memorial to thirty hop pickers who drowned when their cart slipped over a crumbling bridge and dragged them into the depths of the River Medway.

Caption For Hartfield, 1906

We are on the upper River Medway north of the Ashdown Forest, near the Kent border. The 13th-century church of St Mary is on a knoll in the centre of the village.

Caption For Fordwich, The River C1960

Just as they do today, the boys who lived in this historic town - Fordwich is the smallest town in Britain - enjoyed boating on the River Stour which ebbed and flowed between Canterbury and the sea.

Caption For Tenterden, High Street 1900

This was the year that Coca Cola arrived in Kent and an outbreak of typhoid fever terrified local families. At this time the Headcorn to Tenterden railway line was opened.

Caption For Leigh, The Old Oak Tree And Green C1960

Leigh stands near the River?Medway, and is another contender for the 'most attractive village in Kent' title.

Caption For Hest Bank, The Canal C1955

Hest Bank was the seaward side of the village, right at the southern side of the mouth of the River Kent. At one time, the area was referred to as Slyne with Hest.

Caption For Brockham, The Green 1906

Overlooked by the slopes of Box Hill and the sweep of the North Downs, this delightful village acquired its name from the badgers whose setts were by the River Mole.

Caption For Rochester, The Bridge C1955

The River Medway traditionally separates the Men of Kent on its east side from the Kentish Men on the west, but bridges such as this one unite the two 'tribes'.

Caption For Rye, The River Rother 1901

In the 1190s Rye joined the Cinque Ports federation, a group of Kent and Sussex ports that provided ships for the King's navy in return for enormous privileges.

Caption For Llyfnant, Cwm Rhaidr Falls 1892

Twin cataracts cascade down the limestone outcrop before joining together to descend almost gracefully forward and onward to tumble into the river, a thousand feet below.

Caption For Cromford, Willersley Castle From Cromford Bridge C1884

A stone on the bridge marks the spot where Benjamin Heywood went straight into the river as he returned home on horseback in 1697, and emerged unscathed.

Caption For Hemingford Grey, St James' Church 1898

The debris from the spire is said still to lie on the river bed.

Caption For Quorn, C1965

A swan cruises on the river as it curves into the east side of the village, running by a municipalised garden of finely-mown grass, and a statutory wooden seat carefully placed under the only tree of consequence

Caption For Penrith, Lowther Lodge 1893

Askham, four miles south of Penrith, is one of the most attractive villages in the former county of Westmorland, and Askham Bridge, spanning the River Lowther, is one of the most graceful structures

Caption For Bridgwater, The Bridge 1903

In years gone by, the river Parrett carried a large volume of traffic.