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

Maps

509 maps found.

1898, Low Laithe Ref. RNE768292
1899, Low Marnham Ref. RNE768338
1898, Low Moor Ref. RNE768373
1898, Low Moorsley Ref. RNE768396
1897, Low Row Ref. RNE768483
1897, Low Row Ref. RNE768486
1898, Low Tharston Ref. RNE768556
1897, Low Walton Ref. RNE768588
1897, Lowe Hill Ref. RNE768684
1947, Low Alwinton Ref. NPO767748
1947, Low Bentham Ref. NPO767809
1947, Low Borrowbridge Ref. NPO767835
1947, Low Bradley Ref. NPO767844
1946, Low Common Ref. NPO767912
1947, Low Cotehill Ref. NPO767921
1947, Low Etherley Ref. NPO767983
1947, Low Green Ref. NPO768138
1947, Low Green Ref. NPO768139
1947, Low Hutton Ref. NPO768273
1947, Low Laithes Ref. NPO768294

Books

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

Memories

637 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.

Terrified By White Masses

Hi I was taken to the upper Rhondda valley (Tynewydd) by my mother in 1940 , I was some 9 yrs old. I went to school both primary and secondary (Treherbert boys school). I had lots of cousins. Myself and my cousin walked ...Read more

A memory of Blaengwynfi in 1940 by Ray Paget

Childhood

Funny how seeing Memories of Kingstanding title, it brought back so many thoughts of living there in childhood to my 20s. The Geman plane that dropped its bomb on a house in Hurlingham Road, hiding under stairs at school as the planes ...Read more

A memory of Kingstanding by Norma Bird

Tullivers Cafe Cambridge

My mother, Sheila Campbell, owned Tulliver's Cafe in partnership with her friend (and my godmother) Jo Parrington in the late 1930's somewhere in Cambridge. Many of the undergraduates were attracted by the two pretty ...Read more

A memory of Cambridge in 1930 by Rozanne Lowe

King Johns Palace In The 60s!

In the 1960's King John's Palace was occupied completely by airline pilots and cabin crews. I was one of those! It was a fun and happy place with something always going on. The Star and Garter and the Ostrich were the ...Read more

A memory of Colnbrook by Penny Tondeur

Walton Colliery

My name is Roland Mitchell. I worked at Walton colliery as a haulage hand. I worked alongside Percy Heckles, Alan Jennings, Phillip Casgoin and Phillip Redmond and a young lad by the name of George Bernard Shaw. We ...Read more

A memory of Walton in 1971 by Roland Mitchell

Playing Football

I remember the person who broke his leg that day was Bernie Lowe as I was playing for the team Hound United against Netley FC on that pitch. I also remember your father as I played for them for a season with I think your brother ...Read more

A memory of Netley by David Hillman

My House In New Pitsligo

I used to live at No 39 Low Street for a good few years. My neighbours Stanley Robertson, William and Christine McPherson and Jeeny Stewart and across from me were the Mutches. I also went to the school there from 1962 until 1970.

A memory of New Pitsligo in 1962 by Albert Bullen

Colerne In The Second World War Continued

Those of us at Colerne school who passed our 'scholarship' exam at the age of about eleven usually went on to Chippenham Secondary School, which probably goes under a different name now: it's at Hardenhuish, ...Read more

A memory of Colerne in 1940 by John Bunting

Fun On The Ferry

Around about l956/57 we would all go to dances or parties in Southampton and of course, from memory, the last bus home to Hythe/Holbury/Fawley/Calshot was about 10.30p.m. Inevitably we girls missed it so there was a mad dash ...Read more

A memory of Hythe in 1956 by Jeannette Lomas

Reminiscences Of Portsmouth In The Late 1930s

I was born in Portsmouth in 1933. My family and I lived first in Lyndhurst Road - about which I don't recall too much - then later in Merrivale Road. I remember very clearly where Merrivale joined ...Read more

A memory of Portsmouth by Brian Veall

Captions

472 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.

Caption For Bridgnorth, Bridge 1898

Bridgnorth has always been divided in two: High Town on a defensive position on the hill, and Low Town for traders by the river.

Caption For Abridge, Market Place C1960

Here we see The Blue Boar with its fine Tuscan porch (left), and opposite, The Retreat (now the post office).

Caption For Marhamchurch, The Church C1960

It has a low tower, nave and north aisle, with a south transept on the far side. Within, a curious niche in the west wall may be the entry to an anchorite's cell of c1400.

Caption For York, Bootham Bar C1950

Low Petergate (seen in the previous photograph) and High Petergate run up to Bootham Bar, one of York's still surviving medieval gates in the city walls, and to the Thirsk road out of the city.

Caption For Crowland, The Bridge 1894

The town grew up at the gates of the abbey on a low island amid the surrounding marshes, receiving its charter in 1142.

Caption For Bude, Lifeboat 1890

Launching at low tide was achieved by towing the boat over the sand with a team of horses; the launch took place stern first to protect the rudder in the surf.

Caption For Ely, Fore Hill 1925

Although the town itself is very much low-key compared to the impressive cathedral, it does have its place in folklore, with its association with Hereward the Wake; it is firmly rooted in history by its

Caption For Odiham, All Saints Church 1924

The church contains many brasses of men and women who lived in the 15th and 16th centuries; the chancel has delicate 15th-century screens, Jacobean altar rails and low arcades dating back

Caption For Broadstairs, Thames Barge And The Beach 1897

Rows of bathing machines along the shoreline and in front of the low white cliffs demonstrate the popularity, and prevailing prudery, of immersion in sea-water among the Victorian visitors.

Caption For Ilfracombe, From The Torrs C1870

Despite the lofty heights surrounding Ilfracombe, the town centre is low- lying and prone to flooding.

Caption For Portishead, The Esplanade 1924

The pier opened in June 1868 and was soon extended so vessels could use it at low water.

Caption For Greenhead, Greenhead Hotel C1955

About one mile to the north-west is the bastle house of Low Old Shield, one of many fortified farmhouses built during the days of the Border raids.

Caption For Brampton, The Green C1960

The green, on the far side of the village from the church and overlooked by the village school, is now enclosed with a low wooden fence.

Caption For Botley, High Street C1960

Note the house to the centre right: the road has been built up here, and the entrance is now below road level. A low wall gives protection from flooding.

Caption For Ramsey, On The Sands 1895

Though the shore to the south of Ramsey is rocky, a stroll along it at low tide was a popular Victorian way of taking some gentle exercise.

Caption For Weston Super Mare, The Sands 1923

In the far distance on the left you can just glimpse the low-water westward jetty of Birnbeck Pier. This was built so that steamers could berth at all states of the tide.

Caption For Robin Hoods Bay, 1901

It is low tide in this view looking towards the slipway and the Bay Hotel. The Bay itself sweeps around from Ness Point in the north to the 600ft high cliffs of Ravenscar, at the other end.

Caption For Clifton Hampden, The Barley Mow Inn 1890

The Barley Mow is one of the most famous and historic inns on the Thames. Jerome K Jerome featured the pub in 'Three Men in a Boat', published a year before this picture was taken.

Caption For Clitheroe, Low Moor Mill From Edisford Bridge 1921

The view looks upstream to Low Moor Mill, which produced cotton cloth until it closed in the 1950s. Its site is now occupied by a housing development.

Caption For Caton, The Druids' Oak C1955

Low Mill, which only closed in 1970, was claimed to be the oldest in the country.

Caption For Jaywick, A 'b' Type Bungalow C1955

Since then the sea walls have been raised, making it impossible to get sea views from the low-lying chalets.

Caption For Bigbury On Sea, The Tractor C1935

It is possible to walk out to the island and its hotel at low water, but when the tide is in, this beast comes into its own.

Caption For New Brighton, Lighthouse 1892

It became known as Perch Rock Lighthouse because the reef of rock on which it stands (seen here at low tide) once had a post or 'perch' placed on it to warn shipping of its location.

Caption For Mumbles, The Promenade 1898

Strictly speaking, the name actually refers to two islets near here which are only accessible at low tide, but the name has come to refer to the whole promontory.