Places
31 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Market Harborough, Leicestershire
- Market Drayton, Shropshire
- Wickham Market, Suffolk
- Market Deeping, Lincolnshire
- Market Rasen, Lincolnshire
- Downham Market, Norfolk
- Market Warsop, Nottinghamshire
- Market Weighton, Yorkshire
- Market Bosworth, Leicestershire
- Needham Market, Suffolk
- Thorpe Market, Norfolk
- Burnham Market, Norfolk
- Pulham Market, Norfolk
- Betton, Shropshire (near Market Drayton)
- Market Stainton, Lincolnshire
- Market Weston, Suffolk
- Elmstead Market, Essex
- Market Lavington, Wiltshire
- Market Overton, Leicestershire
- Soudley, Shropshire (near Market Drayton)
- Oakley, Staffordshire (near Market Drayton)
- Longford, Shropshire (near Market Drayton)
- Sutton, Shropshire (near Market Drayton)
- Blore, Staffordshire (near Market Drayton)
- Lightwood, Shropshire (near Market Drayton)
- Rosehill, Shropshire (near Market Drayton)
- Knighton, Staffordshire (near Market Drayton)
- Moor End, Yorkshire (near Market Weighton)
- Little London, Lincolnshire (near Market Rasen)
- Wacton Common, Norfolk (near Pulham Market)
- Friday Street, Suffolk (near Wickham Market)
Photos
4,675 photos found. Showing results 1,041 to 1,060.
Maps
142 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,393 memories found. Showing results 521 to 530.
Leek In The 1930s And 40s
I arrived in Leek, or more precisely Leek Brook, aged 4 in 1931. Later went to Miss Rainer's school. Father was sales manager at Joshua Wardle (later director). Many happy memories of Leek and its surroundings until I left for ...Read more
A memory of Leek by
My Uncle's Buthchers Stall Tunstall Market 1960s
I remember my late Uncle Norman Buckley, ( W Buckley & Sons Butchers ) and my late Auntie Irene, working tirelessly on their butcher's stall, always the busiest in Tunstall market !! The finest ...Read more
A memory of Tunstall in 1969 by
Home At Last
I had been coming to Chesterfield as a child from early 60s to visit family in Rhodes Ave Newbold from Glasgow and loved every minute especially summer holidays when my cousin Susan and I would come into town and straight to the ...Read more
A memory of Chesterfield by
Such Care Free Days
A trip to Market Drayton swimming pool was a massive treat for me and my cousins. We loved the feeling of the sun on our backs whilst we swam and the wonderful rural surroundings, with the church clock chiming on the ...Read more
A memory of Market Drayton in 1973 by
Head On Crash
I remember that market square very well indeed. At that time I was taking my girlfriend from Stockwell Teachers Training College to my house to meet my parents for Sunday dinner in my father's Hillman Minx. Feeling very grown up and ...Read more
A memory of Bromley in 1971 by
Growing Up In Handley
My family moved to Handley in 1947 and I spent the rest of my childhood there. Our family name is Harris and my parents were Drs Paul and Zoe , they had five children. We lived off the road to Deanland. I never could ...Read more
A memory of Sixpenny Handley in 1950 by
Greenford Sixties And Seventies
I was born in 1958 in the Perivale Maternity hospital off the Western Avenue. I lived for my first few years in Goring Way and then Queens Avenue until leaving the area in 1973. Memories etched on my mind: ...Read more
A memory of Greenford by
Gala Hairdressers Jeans John Barton
My Mum Jean worked in Watling Ave for many years - Hairdressing. She started work in The Don around 1956. This used to be opp the station. She left and worked at Gala and then had the shop in he name for a while ...Read more
A memory of Burnt Oak by
Memory Of Southall
I was born in St George's Avenue and went to North Road Infants and Juniors. Both my parents were from Southall. My aunt still lives by western Market. I remember playing by the gas works and railway and summer carnivals in the park.
A memory of Southall
1970's 80's, Around The Arndale Centre
Moved into a council house near King George's Park in 1978. My grandparents lived in Santos Road. I used to play as a kid around the bandstand in the park. I remember the shire horses making their way through the ...Read more
A memory of Wandsworth
Captions
2,297 captions found. Showing results 1,249 to 1,272.
The Victorian Town Hall in the centre of the Market Place was built by the Watts-Russell family; today it is occupied by local businesses.
Legend says that a priest in olden times evicted five devils from the building, pursuing them up to the Market Place and into a flock of sheep.
It was essentially a wool town, and its great market was held in the wide stretch of road we see here.
The street came to life, and still does, on Wednesday market day.
The railway from Heacham to Wells was a lifeline for the export of local grain, vegetables, bricks and shellfish for metropolitan markets.
The Market Cross and Chichester Cathedral spire can just be seen in this Victorian photograph. On the left is the Corn Exchange, built in 1830 for local corn auctions.
Named for the mulberry tree that grew in the garden, this 18th-century Kentish hall house in the High Street was once at the centre of Snodland, where the market cross stood outside The Red Lion inn opposite
Yarm has a remarkably wide High Street, typical of many North Riding market towns.
'Market tickets' costing 7d return were issued for travelling to Alton every Tuesday.
Buller's Quay in the foreground is now a car park, and the fish market is at the far end of the quay.
Londoners tended market gardens close by which are now smothered by the buildings of Kensington. In the 18th century it was considered foolhardy to venture here after dark.
This view was taken looking up the Market Place; on the left was a three-gabled building, probably dating back to the Tudor period.
Sidmouth began as a small fishing town with a bustling local market, but even these activities had begun to decline by the time the first visitors arrived in the late 18th century.
The High Street approach to the Market Place is seen here flanked by the Easiephit shoe shop and Woolworth's on one side, and the Rose & Crown Hotel on the other.
Standing in the upper Douglas Valley, Wigan was once a market town, but by the mid 19th century it was a major centre for Lancashire's coal industry.
It once had its own oasthouse and maltings, and a cattle-market used to take place in the inn yard.
The long, broad street winds through this attractive market town, that sits in the valley of the River Culm alongside the busy M5 motorway.
This market, with the medieval Luttrell Arms Hotel to the right and Conygar Tower on the hill behind, has little changed.
King Street is the location of the former market place, which was built over many years ago. Also along here is the timber-framed Saracen's Head.
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.
Opposite is the 16th-century Wagon and Horses, in whose yard the livestock market used to be held.
Those were the days before political correctness and school marketing. Schools like this were not afraid to teach character.
It is passing the elaborate façade of the Market Hall, which had been completed only the year before, in 1902.
Taken from the edge of Parsonage Woods to the north of the town, this view, almost unchanged today, looks past the cornfield towards the historic market town nestling in its Chiltern valley.
Places (31)
Photos (4675)
Memories (1393)
Books (0)
Maps (142)