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Photos
5 photos found. Showing results 181 to 5.
Maps
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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 91 to 100.
Ann Street Memories
Having been born in Ann Street in 1962, my memories of the surrounding area are quite vivid, including Waddles Foundry; the metal beating from the works would often wake me in the morning. It was on land just behind the Bull pub, ...Read more
A memory of Llanelli in 1969 by
My First Job
This was my first full time job. I was the office junior. My name was Anne Steedman. I loved my role there; going round with the post, printing out on the duplicating machine (messy things in them days lol), learning all about he "dolly ...Read more
A memory of Corby in 1969 by
Mevagissey Museum
I have many childhood memories of Mevagissey. My parents bought a cottage in Cliff Street, Mevagissey during the late 1950s. We used it as a holiday home until 1965 when my father retired from designing Colt Houses (all timber ...Read more
A memory of Mevagissey in 1969 by
Paradise
1969 wasn't my first visit to Blackwaterfoot, that was two years earlier, but it was probably the year I fell in love with the place. We stayed at The Rock Hotel, and I was 12 at the time. It was a small establishment, probably ...Read more
A memory of Blackwaterfoot in 1969 by
Living On Elmer Road Middleton On Sea 1962 1974
I lived there as a young child from about the ages of 2-14 years old (1960-early 1970s). As a young child Elmer Road seemed to be at the end of the world. The main road heading east hit a ...Read more
A memory of Middleton-on-Sea in 1969 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
Under The Arches
I remember visiting this spot when I first moved to work in London. It is described in Nairn's London, as follows:- " A very fine passage called The Arches runs underneath Charing Cross station from Villiers Street to Craven Street. ...Read more
A memory of London in 1969 by
The Lane
I grew up in Peckham, went to Peckham Rye Primary school, Peckham Rye park and common was in fact my playground, how lucky was I! This was in the late 1960s, early 1970s. My mum did all her shopping down the lane, she was a dressmaker and ...Read more
A memory of Peckham in 1969 by
Coomercial Studies
Went to the college from Heolgam Secondary school when I was 16. Took shothand, typing and all office Business related studies was Dale Stanton then. Although I went to a secondary school I still managed to get my O and A levels ...Read more
A memory of Bridgend in 1968 by
The Eight Bells
I have very happy memories of Hazel and I looking after the Eight Bells for Jack and Sylvia when they went on holiday. This was for a few years in the late 60's and early 70's. Most sadly, my lovely wife Hazel, 'nee' Cook, died very ...Read more
A memory of Kelsale in 1968 by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 217 to 240.
Today, parts of the old building (the arched doorway for example) can still be seen incorporated into the interior decor of a shop on Pride Hill.
Opposite is a pair of brick cottages with doors and windows in a pretty segmental arch, and on the pavement outside are some children's tricycles.
This former fishing village, situated on the south coast of the Lleyn Peninsula, now hosts boats of a much more upmarket kind.
The south gate with its twin arches is a remnant of the walls which once enclosed the town.
The enormous mosaic above the chancel arch was created in 1905 in memory of the churchwarden's wife.
With their ground floor bay windows, they could be from a much later period, and would not look out of place in the 1930s.
There are any number of pictures of the mills in the archive, but not a single one of the twenty-three arched railway viaduct straddling the valley of the Bollin.
By the mid-Fifties, Crown Square had taken on a much more urban appearance, with black and white kerb markings, a Belisha beacon on the right, and traffic signs in the centre of the
The nave of Tideswell church dates from the 14th century, and its size and standing give the building the air of a much larger church or even a cathedral.
The village church is seen here from the Gothic, six-arched river bridge of 1864, which links Clifton Hampden with the Barley Mow inn.
After the trade finished in the 1860s some pre-1825 kiln arches on the quayside saw service as fishermen's stores.
The upper falls can still be viewed from a 16th century single-arch bridge over the Ure.
As we look from inside the city walls through the arch to St Dunstan's Street, we can see the route taken by Henry II when he came as a penitent after the murder of Thomas Becket in 1174, and by Henry
The three-arched, balustraded bridge at Shillingford dates back to 1827 and carries the Wallingford to Thame road over the river. The road was turnpiked in 1764.
Bridge Street slopes down to the river Mole and the 14-arch bridge of 1782.
The first brick was laid in 1882 and the first locomotive crossed the thirteen-arched viaduct in 1884.
It is a single-arched structure weighing 380 tons, with a span of 100 ft and an overall length of 196 ft. Today the bridge is restricted to pedestrian traffic only.
In the background is the ivy-clad nine-arched bridge spanning the Fowey River.
Perhaps the best-known feature of Burnsall is its magnificent, five-arched stone bridge across the River Wharfe, seen here from the river.
Canova considered the old Waterloo Bridge, with its nine elliptical arches, to be one of the most magnificent in Europe.
The handsome triple-arched gateway, with its classical screen and groups of Ionic columns, was intended originally to create a noble approach to the Park from Buckingham Palace.
The graceful three-arched bridge over the Thames was rebuilt in 1832 by John and George Rennie, close to the site of the many bridges that have crossed the Thames since the Romans first spanned it.
Seen from the footbridge to the Oxfordshire bank, the eleven-arch bridge is an 18th-century one that carries a vast amount of traffic, for Sonning is in effect Reading's eastern by-pass.
Without the finials and pinnacles seen in earlier photographs of Christ Church it looks a much plainer building.
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