Places
6 places found.
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Photos
2,208 photos found. Showing results 981 to 1,000.
Maps
41 maps found.
Books
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Memories
2,827 memories found. Showing results 491 to 500.
Wartime Worton.
I have a shadowy memory of living with my Mum for a while in,I think,1942 in one of a row of cottages on a road with a lot of trees opposite perhaps behind a wall.There was a little shop a bit further along to the left on the ...Read more
A memory of Worton by
Bluestone Cottage Hough Hill
When I moved to "Bluestone" in 1955 there was no water or sanitation .Mum and Dad ( Len & Ellen Snape) collected the water in pales from the spout in Sandy Lane. We had a well but the water in it wasn't safe to drink. ...Read more
A memory of Brown Edge by
Happy Times
I went to live in Llanthony village around 1970 with my husband who was brought up at The Daren Farm, and our children Lynda and Andrew. We lived in The Cornmill which is directly opposite the old post office, it was called Mill Cottage ...Read more
A memory of Llanthony
Childhood Memories.
I grew up in the house at the end of the street which was called Cherry Cottage.I would be about 3 or 4 when the picture was taken. My mum had the large Yew tree on the right of the house front sawn down as it made the house dark. My ...Read more
A memory of Naburn by
The Lees Of Callow End
My father's mother's family (Lee or Lea) lived in a cottage called Brook House, near Broadlands Farm. We have a picture of Brook House painted in about 1910, in which it seems as if the cottage may have been part of the ...Read more
A memory of Callow End by
My Early Years
I was born right across the road from this row of shops ,at no. 491 they were every old cottages ,the end one being the old police station, complete with dungeon, the elderly lady who lived there still had the front as it was as a ...Read more
A memory of Heaton Mersey by
Wargrave In Berkshire About 1966.
I used to work for a company called David Greig, they had provisions shops in many towns with the flagship shop at that time (mid sixties) being the one at Reading. I worked mainly in the Orpington shop and was asked to ...Read more
A memory of Wargrave
Born In Southall
I was born at 18, Cranleigh Gardens on the 23/05/1936, my was born in Whites Cottage, Kings Street Southall onthe 26//091905 my grandfather was Southall first fire officer my ...Read more
A memory of Southall by
Childhood.
I lived in one of the cottages directly opposite these shops in the 50's. No 33 Kennington Cottages. My youngest brother and sister were born here. I have so many fond memories. I seem to remember the drapers shop had a lovely dog. I used ...Read more
A memory of Aveley
1940's Wortley
The photograph shows the entry to Hell Mill Lane (sometimes called Riley Road) which runs along the valley of the Little Avon towards Ozleworth; to the right behind the trees is Wortley Farm, occupied in the 1940's by the ...Read more
A memory of Wortley by
Captions
2,010 captions found. Showing results 1,177 to 1,200.
The attractive Beehive Cottage on the right was originally the lodge to Captain Stopford's house on Ashby Road. That house, alas, was demolished, and the site used to build the Community Centre.
Instead the carving was in the garden of a cottage called, appropriately enough, The Elephant and Castle.
This is another picturesque Hampshire village, home to a good selection of perfect whitewashed thatched cottages.
The fine set of old cottages on the left were probably owned by the railway. They face the Railway Arms across the well-laid-out street.
In 1921 a catering business was started at Bracebridge Cottages and in 1983 it became Bobby Brown's.
The village was, of course, much smaller then, with just four sizeable families and a dozen cottages.
I doubt if she had many amenities in that little cottage. TV aerials are absent: this was still the radio age, and television was a crude and expensive luxury.
White House cottage to its right, at the end of Bunker's Row, has now been demolished.
In this view the Beehive shop and the dormered cottage beyond survive, but the buildings beyond have been rebuilt for Townsends and the Post Office.
The statue of Queen Victoria, which still stands on the corner, was taken from the front of the stone mason's house, Victoria Cottage, with the scaffolding (beyond the garage).
In World War II the big house was commandeered for housing American officers, and Christie moved to the thatched cottage on the quay.
There was also a tannery, sited well away from the cottages because of its smell.
Beside the clapboarded cottage is Franklin`s butcher`s shop. This used to get flushed out and cleaned once a week, sending water coursing down the street. Next door is the Co-op drapery.
The 18th- and early 19th-century cottages on the left face the timber-framed house, which was built as a single dwelling in 1540; it is continuously jettied with a hearth-passage entrance
The Swan pub dates from the 1870s and, apart from the loss of the boundary wall and railings, remains, as do the cottages.
This is Burford Street, with stone houses of all shapes and sizes from cottages to the Swan Hotel on the left, a part-Tudor building, and the urbane Georgian of Ryton House on the right with its four brick
This row of flint and brick cottages are in the style of the 17th century, but they have the date 1844 over the porch.
The 17th century millworkers' cottages are now part of hotel accommodation.
The cottages are now all private dwellings - the one with the shop blind has a pretty bay window today.
The river is crossed on a toll bridge; this view shows the toll gate and cottage, the former now replaced by a booth and barrier ten yards beyond.
Visitors staying in these cottages would enjoy a quiet holiday walking the marshy banks of the estuary and the surrounding heathlands, or boating and fishing.
It remains a village of beautiful cottages on the high road between Exeter and Dorchester.
The body of the church used to stand separate from the older tower, and the space between was occupied by cottages until a council chamber was built in 1851. This is now the choir vestry.
The body of the church used to stand separate from the older tower, and the space between was occupied by cottages until a council chamber was built in 1851. This is now the choir vestry.
Places (6)
Photos (2208)
Memories (2827)
Books (0)
Maps (41)

