Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Shanklin, Isle of Wight
- Ventnor, Isle of Wight
- Ryde, Isle of Wight
- Cowes, Isle of Wight
- Sandown, Isle of Wight
- Port of Ness, Western Isles
- London, Greater London
- Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
- Dublin, Republic of Ireland
- Killarney, Republic of Ireland
- Douglas, Isle of Man
- Plymouth, Devon
- Newport, Isle of Wight
- Southwold, Suffolk
- Bristol, Avon
- Lowestoft, Suffolk
- Cromer, Norfolk
- Edinburgh, Lothian
- Maldon, Essex
- Clacton-On-Sea, Essex
- Felixstowe, Suffolk
- Norwich, Norfolk
- Hitchin, Hertfordshire
- Stevenage, Hertfordshire
- Colchester, Essex
- Nottingham, Nottinghamshire
- Bedford, Bedfordshire
- Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
- Aldeburgh, Suffolk
- St Albans, Hertfordshire
- Hunstanton, Norfolk
- Chelmsford, Essex
- Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire
- Peterborough, Cambridgeshire
- Brentwood, Essex
- Glengarriff, Republic of Ireland
Photos
9,107 photos found. Showing results 15,981 to 9,107.
Maps
181,006 maps found.
Books
11 books found. Showing results 19,177 to 11.
Memories
29,022 memories found. Showing results 7,991 to 8,000.
Smallholding In Eastwood Road
This memory is my mum's - in the 1940s she remembers her dad taking her (on his motorbike with mum in the sidecar) to a smallholding on Eastwood Road in Rayleigh - she thinks probably to buy 'day-old chicks' (her ...Read more
A memory of Rayleigh in 1940 by
1980s
I was the newspaper reporter for the Coventry Evening Telegraph regional office on Wood Street for a year and lived off Joseph Way on a new housing development. I remember reporting on time share appartments at the former home of ...Read more
A memory of Stratford-upon-Avon by
An Under Housemaid At Williamscot House
When my Great Aunt Phyllis Ivy Jarrett left school at the age of 13 (about 1918), she joined the domestic staff at Williamscot House, where she was an 'under-housemaid'. Phyllis used to send photos home to ...Read more
A memory of Williamscot in 1920
Dukeshouse Wood Camp School Hexham (Part One)
My school was one of the first to go to Dukeshouse Wood Camp School just outside Hexham. This was in November 1945 shortly after the Second World War with the lads from Gateshead at Alexandra Road school. ...Read more
A memory of Hexham in 1945 by
Wartime Memory
Not sure of the date but I remember the church being destroyed. I had just become old enough to join the fire service as a youth messenger and I was in the fire station at the top of Snakes Lane when the incident occurred. The ...Read more
A memory of Woodford Green in 1943 by
My Great Aunt At Albrighton
My great-aunt's name was Mina Sneath (nee Hanmer ) and her husband was Thomas Sneath. According to family story they lived at Albrighton in a converted railway carriage. Thomas was a very good ...Read more
A memory of Albrighton by
Raf Norton
I was posted to RAF Norton in 1960 and told by the powers that be to catch a bus (number ??) from the railway station to the camp. I asked the conductor to tell me when I got to the stop. He said "RAF Norton, I've not heard of that". He ...Read more
A memory of Sheffield by
Ferndale
My forebears lived in the Bedwas area and I saw Gellideg Isaf Farm on a memory posted by Roy Williams who was born at Gellideg Isaf Farm, Maes-y-cwmmer. My 3xgreat grandfather Moses Jenkins owned/rented Gellideg Isaf Farm in the 1800s. On ...Read more
A memory of Ferndale in 1880 by
Drummuir Station
I believe that Drummuir Station, Parish of Botriphnie, County of Banff, Scotland, was the starting point, in 1926, of a very long, life-changing journey: My teen-age father, along with an older brother, headed for Southampton, ...Read more
A memory of Drummuir in 1920 by
Philip Streets
This is the photo in the distance of the house where I was brought up (from Dec 1952 to March 1964) with my three brothers, Michael, Alan and twin Roger, N° 1 Abbey Close. Our neighbours were Mr and Mrs Orchard with their two ...Read more
A memory of Hythe in 1952 by
Your search returned a large number of results. Please try to refine your search further.
Captions
29,158 captions found. Showing results 19,177 to 19,200.
The 'burn' part of the name comes from the stream which runs through the village.The 'chat' part is either an Old English personal name 'Ceatta', or the word 'ceat', which means 'piece of wet ground
The Vale of Berkeley has long been a rich agricultural area.
The charming central Green is overlooked by houses and shops, most of which were built in the late 18th and 19th centuries when local merchants invested wealth made in the maritime
Each week, on market day, colourful stalls line the pavements of the High Street, and shoppers come from all over East Devon as they have for centuries.
It was erected in 1856-60 at a cost of £60,000 for Lady Willoughby de Broke as a memorial to her husband.
The church was restored in the 1860s and boasts wall paintings on the north wall of the nave.
Fortunately, this blot on the landscape has now been flushed away. The market continues, but it is now more of a flea market and car-boot sale.
This is the Abergwesyn pass through the mountains to the east of Tregaron.
It was probably built in the 13th century, when the town of Swavesey was first established. It fell out of use when the St Ives to Cambridge railway was built in c1850.
Ships of 300 to 4,000 tons lay at the fore and aft buoys in the river, while others tied up at wharves.
Located at the corner of Stockerston Road and South Backway, West Bank was built in 1866 by Howard Candler, 'a small, energetic mathematician', who always refused to have more than six boys boarding.
The village is now a faceless sort of place, apart from one or two buildings; these include a superb but well-disguised hall house of around 1500 in Church Road.
The parish itself included the outlying villages of Bickerstaffe, Burscough, Lathom, Scarisbrick and Skelmersdale; the population of Ormskirk itself grew from 2,554 in 1801 to 3,838 in 1821.
The college later moved into a new building on Oxford Road which had been designed by Alfred Waterhouse, winner of the competition to design Manchester Town Hall.
Dr William Stanley Goddard, headmaster of Winchester College, retired to Andover in 1809.
The sunshine picks out the white walls of rock chalk of this fine Edwardian house designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens with planting and landscaping by Gerturde Jekyll.
The 'Cuckoo Trail' for cyclists, walkers and the disabled connects Horam to Heathfield and Polegate via the route of an old railway.
This famous resort on the Holyhead road, in the narrow, deeply-glaciated valley of the river Conwy, became popular when it was reached by the railway in Victorian times.
Taw Vale Parade is to the right of the Albert Clock, whose building was started in 1862 and not completed until a decade later; the money came from public subscription.
This well-known inn is situated in a peaceful corner of the New Forest, close to Cadnam.
Further east, Franklins Outfitters, a mid 19th-century Italianate building on the right has gone, as have those in the distance on the left, to be replaced by the tepid Neo-Georgian Talbot Court.
The church is a curious mix of greenstone and limestone giving a patchwork quilt effect, while the chancel is in brick.
This Norman church atop Crayford Hill is probably the oldest in the borough of Bexley.
A bus to Pedders Lane and Ashton-on-Ribble plies down Fishergate, but so busy has Preston become, that drastic alterations in regulating traffic have had to be made.
Places (6814)
Photos (9107)
Memories (29022)
Books (11)
Maps (181006)