Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Burgess Hill, Sussex
- Brierley Hill, West Midlands
- Cotswold Hills, Gloucestershire
- Kelton Hill, Dumfries and Galloway
- Box Hill, Surrey
- Turners Hill, Sussex
- Cleeve Hill, Gloucestershire
- Biggin Hill, Greater London
- Beacon Hill, Surrey
- Mill Hill, Greater London
- Leith Hill, Surrey
- Scayne's Hill, Sussex
- Cross Hills, Yorkshire (near Silsden)
- Harrow on the Hill, Greater London
- Winchmore Hill, Greater London
- Northwood Hills, Greater London
- Walton on the Hill, Surrey
- Muswell Hill, Greater London
- Clee Hill, Shropshire (near Doddington)
- Berry Hill, Gloucestershire
- Forest Hill, Greater London
- Ide Hill, Kent
- Quantock Hills, Somerset
- Crays Hill, Essex
- Longfield Hill, Kent
- Crockham Hill, Kent
- Napton on the Hill, Warwickshire
- Herne Hill, Greater London
- Amersham on the Hill, Buckinghamshire
- Hill Ridware, Staffordshire
- Tan Hill, Yorkshire
- Forty Hill, Greater London
- Windmill Hill, Sussex
- Boyn Hill, Berkshire
- Wheatley Hill, Durham (near Peterlee)
- Horndon on the Hill, Essex
Photos
6,145 photos found. Showing results 1,281 to 1,300.
Maps
4,509 maps found.
Books
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Memories
4,101 memories found. Showing results 641 to 650.
Farm At White Hill
My father Jenkin Evans and mother Valerie Evans lived at Potters Cross Farm, White Hill, Kinver from just before the Second World War. This is the farmhouse which you can see which still exists to this day. They raised four children, ...Read more
A memory of Kinver by
The Dreaded Climb Up The Hill
When I was a lad, my mum would take me shopping in Folkestone's town centre. Probably to Sainsbury's in Sandgate Road, Timothy Whites, etc. Being that we lived Wood Avenue area, we would walk down Dover Road & ...Read more
A memory of Folkestone in 1953 by
Elmsleigh School St Polycarp School
Born in Aldershot in 1939 my father worked for a builder in Farnborough, Chuter, and eventually moved to a rented house on Folly Hill. I initially went to St Polycarp but moved to Elmsleigh where both myself and my ...Read more
A memory of Farnham in 1945 by
My Fading Memories
I was but a lad of 8 when my folks bundled us all off to a wide land downunder. Since 1968, Australia has been my home. I often speak of my fading memories of Queensbury, my walks through the village, living on 'The Mountain', ...Read more
A memory of Queensbury in 1968 by
Stocks Hill
Hi, we have bought a property 75 yards from Ali Dent's the butcher, a little red-brick house in 'The Yard' belonging to a Mr Howlett. I wonder if you remember the cottage? If you're interested I can send you some pictures of the cottage and ...Read more
A memory of Hilgay in 2007
Paper Boy
As a 12-year-old I sold newspapers every morning outside the cookhouse where hundreds of National Servicemen were going through the horrors of their initial training in the Guards regiments. I believe they earnt 28/6 per week, much of which ...Read more
A memory of Caterham in 1950 by
Blacksmith's Yard
My paternal grandmother Annie Cowell came from Stanford and I have always been led to believe that the space on the left of the house in the foreground, where the trees are, was the site of her father's blacksmith's ...Read more
A memory of Stanford-le-Hope in 1940 by
Badgers Hole
My father (who died recently) used to play in Shirley Hills, and Badgers Hole, which was close to his home in Shirley Way, Croydon when he was a small boy. He had 4 other brothers and a sister. He often told us of the fun they had there, ...Read more
A memory of Shirley in 1920 by
Trolly Times
Most young boys at sometime rode and or built their own trolly. My experience growing up, living on the edge of French's Yard on Epping New Road in Buckhurst Hill, was full of good times riding my home-built trolly down the long ...Read more
A memory of Buckhurst Hill by
Dawnay Road
I was born in Dowlans Road, opposite to Dawnay Road. The grocers which is referred to was where my mum used to shop. Next to the grocers my best friend Nigel lived, as did Dave Hill before him. The waste ground to the left in the ...Read more
A memory of Great Bookham in 1945 by
Captions
1,906 captions found. Showing results 1,537 to 1,560.
The A1 sweeps north between Moat Mound Recreation Ground and Mill Hill Golf Club, and is little changed since it was built, apart from the introduction of high level lighting standards.
Each cottage comprises two dwellings, with a central door and a tiny hall. The lane curves gently down towards the ornamental lake at the foot of the hill. CORFE CASTLE, From the Church
Mount Lane climbs the hill towards St Peter`s Church on The Mount (right of centre).
This photograph was taken from Windmill Hill, the only point in the town that is higher than the castle. The road curving up to the left of the castle is Roydon Road, known at this time as Zulu Road.
At the northern end are the Green Hill Gardens, and at the southern end, the Alexandra Gardens; while near the clock tower stands an equestrian statue of George III, erected in 1809.
Farningham is just a short distance from Eynsford, set at another pretty crossing of the Darent between ridges of chalk hills.
In the distance is Coombe Hill; since 1904, three years after this view, it has been dominated by a Boer War memorial obelisk.
Its more salubrious site was, and remains, the one pictured here on Milford Hill, just east of the city centre beyond the ring road.
Instead the hill is now an important nature reserve.
The observatory on Bidston Hill is a recognised weather observation station.
Wakemans Hill Parade, dated 1931, sets an acceptable design standard at this date, but this has now to a greater extent been supplanted by modern offices and industrial estate architecture in the area.
This eastern entrance eventually came to be known as Bellgate, since the Bell public house stands further up the hill to the right.
Aughton's sister church at Aughton Moss, Christ Church (known as the Cathedral on the Hill), has a rare Noah's Ark font.
This track could be part of the route along which came supplies of wool for Dolphinholme Mill.
His name lives on in the village: Norfolk Hill goes up to the right, and opposite on Sheffield Road is the Norfolk Arms Hotel.
At St Mary's Church, on the hill, there is a cross commemorating 43 hop pickers who died of cholera in 1849.
Blackdown is a great sandstone hill 918 feet high, and Blackdown House is a Tudor-style manor house of 1640.
A lone horse and cart trundles up the hill, and children are enjoying playing in the dust of the unsurfaced road.
But nearby Oldbury Hill has traces of Neanderthal hunters and an Iron Age fort on its slopes.
This view was taken from Castle Hill looking north. The Argyll Hotel continues to attract guests, and the scene today is much as is shown here, except for the fashions and the absence of horses.
The hills above the village are rich in flowers that peep out from rock fissures into the sunlight, and Sally also found a ready market for the local Cheddar Pinks.
The hills above the village are rich in flowers that peep out from rock fissures into the sunlight, and Sally also found a ready market for the local Cheddar Pinks.
A secluded village in the middle of the Downs near the Hampshire border, south of Harting.There is a fine Neolithic long barrow on Telegraph Hill, which is 534 feet high.The Norman church of St Mary
The bridge in our photograph is the Greyhound Road Bridge; it replaced the very first bridge, the medieval Old Bridge, which led directly to Bridge Hill and China Lane, which was only 8ft wide.
Places (1006)
Photos (6145)
Memories (4101)
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Maps (4509)