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
9 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
299 photos found. Showing results 121 to 140.
Maps
99 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
381 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.
Joe Wyche
I remember Joe Wyche very, very well; a very progressive man, and to be frank I owe my success to him. At age thirteen he hauled me into his office to inform me I was lazy and he was going to make me work. In consequence I did work for ...Read more
A memory of Poynton in 1956 by
The War Years In Tongham
I lived and served in the Home Guard in Tongham during the Second World War. Dad played the piano in the White Hart at that time. Canadian soldiers were in abundance (2 of my sisters were war brides). The landlord of the ...Read more
A memory of Tongham in 1940 by
I Am Looking For Missing Family In Holytown Area
Hello, I am looking to find lost family in the Holytown area. Father John Johnson Adair Mother Elizabeth Mckenzie Hart Children Grace, Hugh, James, Ppatrick Siblings are Jim, John and Elizabeth If anyone can join the names please contact me.
A memory of Holytown
My Beginning
I returned to Andover in August 2010 and was as excited as the day we left in November 1956 when my family decided we were going to Australia. 54 years is a long time and I think that my wife was surprised at how much I remembered ...Read more
A memory of Andover in 1956 by
The Hough
when I was about a year old I moved to the Hough from Englesea Brook, where my parents lived for a couple of years. I went to school at Shavington and was good friends with John Addison, Alan Giller (the latter living ...Read more
A memory of Hough by
My Time Near Andover
WE were married in July 1966. As I was stationed at Middle Wallop, after our honeymoon in London we caught the train to Andover and stayed for 2 nights at the White Hart (is that the name? Opposite the old bus station near the ...Read more
A memory of Andover by
Morris Minor
In the photo forground is a Morris Minor which my mother bought for my sister and me to lern to drive in, we allways parked it under the old wooden street lamp as we lived in White Hart Cottage just a little lower down on the other ...Read more
A memory of Limpsfield in 1965 by
The "White Hart Inn" Towngate
My husband's ancestors John & Ann Archer were Innkeeper's of this Inn in Bradwell in the 1850's. They lived here until their deaths in 1879 & are buried in St.Barnabus Churchyard. They both originally came from ...Read more
A memory of Bradwell by
Child Okeford In The 1940s
I remember the village in the 1940s to 1970s. I went to school at the centre of the village till 1951 then went to Sturminster S.M school. On the walk home from school we used to go into the forge run by Alfred ...Read more
A memory of Child Okeford by
Captions
275 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.
There are milk churns on the cart outside F W Hart 'Family Grocer, Tea and Provision Merchant'. Note the errand boy's bike propped up against the gas light.
Nearby are two other inns,The White Hart and The Snooty Fox. Beyond is Ollerton Hall, late 17th-century and derelict for some years, but shortly to become a Sue Ryder Home.
During the Second World War, the fighter pilots based at Biggin Hill used to congregate at the Victorian White Hart pub further down the street.
The White Hart beyond, with its tall chimneys, was run by Dick Powling as a family and commercial hotel. The gabled HSBC next door began as the London and Provincial Bank in 1908.
This sizeable hamlet on the Downs south of Harting has no church, but boasts some attractive flint cottages and fine scenery.There is plenty of history here: Bow Hill was a great Stone Age centre
photographer's activity (right), while her offspring watches from her hooded perambulator; they are on the hill leading towards the 11th-century Saxon church of All Saints and the 200-year-old White Hart
Hart and Smith next to each other seem to sell just about everything anyone could want - postcards, wooden hoops, newspapers, parasols, toys and groceries.
today; Lloyd's Bank (centre left), which took over the earlier Devon and Cornwall Bank, built in 1832; Hicks and Son (left), who still run their drapery business from the same premises; and the White Hart
Behind the town hall is the White Hart Hotel, which was demolished in 1935 and replaced by shops and offices.
Centre, on the horizon, is All Hallows Church, and near it is Hart House. An oak sign, erected in 1937, tells us that the street they stand on is part of Harthill Walk, mentioned in Scott's Ivanhoe.
The Whyte Harte has a rendered and colourwashed front over a Tudor timber-frame (it may be earlier: there is a date, 1388, on the building), and it is obviously the supplier of stirrup cups to the
The ashlar stone building with a Cotswold-tiled mansard roof, on the left, contrasts with the half-timbered White Hart Hotel down on the right and with the well-proportioned three-storey building situated
This old shepherd, plodding on to Walsingham market, has been enjoying a glass of ale in the 'White Hart'.
There are two old coaching inns in the High Street: the 14th-century George and the White Hart. In the picture an old-style touring caravan hitched up to its towing car waits at the roadside.
The ashlar stone building with a Cotswold-tiled mansard roof, on the left, contrasts with the half-timbered White Hart Hotel down on the right and with the well-proportioned three-storey building situated
In the 17th century the building that is now The White Hart Royal was a manor house, and Charles I stayed there in July 1644 after the Battle of Marston Moor.
Facing the end of the street beyond the White Hart, the huge block reflects the confidence and wealth generated in the town by the china clay industry.
Telegraph Hill, which is 534 feet high.The Norman church of St Mary was rebuilt in 1849, with a timber bell turret and a shingled spire.THis photograph shows the old coaching inn on the Emsworth to Harting
This wide, curving street set on a sandy ridge runs downhill to the 16th-century White Hart Inn.
To the right, the shop with the Hovis sign is still a baker's; Jacksons has been rebuilt but remains an ironmonger's; and further on, the White Hart has become shops.
The White Hart on the left survives, as, of course, does St Peter's church beyond the neo-Georgian shopping parade.
The pub in the distance is still the White Hart, but the petrol station has gone. The village church is hidden behind the trees on the right.
The pub in the distance is still the White Hart, but the petrol station has gone. The village church is hidden behind the trees on the right.
The White Hart is shown on a town map of 1839 and is likely to be 15th-century in origin.
Places (9)
Photos (299)
Memories (381)
Books (0)
Maps (99)

