Places
10 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,534 photos found. Showing results 181 to 200.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
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Memories
8,172 memories found. Showing results 91 to 100.
That's My Mum!
That's my Mum pushing my younger sister, Rosie, into the newsagents. We lived in Northwood Avenue from when the house was built in 1958 until the early 80s - although I still drive through Purley on a regular basis. A couple of doors away ...Read more
A memory of Purley by
Happy Childhood Holidays
I say 1950 for the year my memory relates to but in fact my memories cover from around 1946 to 196 I've only just found this web site for "Memories" although have looked at the site before and what nostalgia it has evoked ...Read more
A memory of Llwyngwril in 1950 by
Penton Camp Club
The Penton Camp Club started in about 1903. Its members included the Manager of Martin's Bank, London, the manager of the Drury Lane Theatre and many other rich men. They would come by train to Staines, the old station at the ...Read more
A memory of Penton Hook in 1900 by
Molly Gray's Memories Of Weston Green, Thames Ditton, Surrey.
When we were children during WWII, my brothers Rob and Wilf and myself often visited Weston Green. At Weston Green there were two churches and two ponds called Marneys and Milburns. My ...Read more
A memory of Weston Green by
Living In Teddington 1950s To 1980s
We moved from 76 Princes Road in 1957 to the other end of Teddington, to 143 High Street, opposite Kingston Lane. My parents bought the house for about £1400 (yes fourteen hundred) as a refurb project. It still had ...Read more
A memory of Teddington
The Only Television Set In The Street.
I don't suppose that many of my friends will have watched the last Coronation on TV, partly because it was 70 years ago, but mainly because very few people had a television. My father, Frank, had a Radio and ...Read more
A memory of Glasgow by
Northcote Road
My granddad was a master baker in the shop on the corner of Northcote Road and Mallinson Road (1930's). There used to be an old advertisement painted high up on the side wall. I would love to know the name of the bakery if anyone remembers. I think there is a Gail's Bakery on this site now.
A memory of Battersea
Talke A Forgotten Village
As you proceed north along the A34 towards the Cheshire border you will approach Talke traffic lights and on the left and right side of the road there are two areas of grassed land. This grassed area was once the village of ...Read more
A memory of Talke in 1959
Twyford Reading Club & Cafe
Mine is not a memory but a request for more information about the above property that was situated in Station Road almost opposite St Mary's. The name can still be read faintly but when I first moved to Twyford in 1983, I ...Read more
A memory of Twyford by
Train Journey
My brother attended warham court school as he had asthma. It was in the 1970's.every 3rd Sunday would get the train from Victoria to Horsham, where a coach would collect us and take us to the school. The same people would get ...Read more
A memory of Warnham Court School
Captions
3,478 captions found. Showing results 217 to 240.
The shop and the house next door have been replaced by a modern parade of shops.
These houses and shops were built on the old green when the railway cut through the village in c1850. Lloyds Bank occupies a house and shop combined (right), and next door is the Plough pub.
The village was rebuilt in brick after a disastrous fire; shops, chapels and the school all have slate roofs.
This is the main shopping street of Sleaford, and the Handley Memorial was the ideal place for a set of destination signs.
The arcade was the Victorian equivalent of a shopping mall, offering undercover shopping and retail outlets on two levels. In 1899 the arcade even had a bioscope parlour.
It was during this time that most of the wooden cottages and shops along Beach Road became the concrete amusements and shops we know today.
This was in the days when supermarkets complemented high street shopping, and there was still room for the smaller, independent retailer.
The shop in the distance is now a bigger 'One-Stop Shop'. At the far end are the two gabled bays of the Old Rectory.
Here the road is lined with shops, including the rather picturesque row of shops, typical of its period, on the right here - it dates from 1936 and is called Castle Buildings.
This view shows a busy and bustling parade of shops and services. Edwards garage sign on the right is interesting.
Continuing along the road containing the spa building, this parade of shops is to be found on the right-hand side.
rather downmarket- looking Fine Fare supermarket with what appears to be a corrugated iron roof has managed to gain a toe-hold, next to the more substantial Linney's electrical appliance shop
Today the whole focus of the shopping centre of Widnes has moved from the area around Victoria Square about a mile away so that it is now centred here and the street has become a pedestrian
This general view of Northbrook Street shows the gable end to the left of a shop front, above which is a clock. This is all that remains of cloth- maker John Winchcombe's house.
The property on the left is of particular interest, because in about 1970 a large section of the older central Middlesbrough buildings was flattened to create the first major shopping mall - the Cleveland
The man on the left is about to enter the shop of Cyril Amey, hairdresser and shopkeeper. There are then two 16th-century houses with jetties, but the grocer's shop is no longer on the corner.
The post office that gave this picture its name was based in the building on the left, which was also a village shop. Today there is no village shop, nor a post office.
The shop on the left is now an antique lighting shop, while the garage has gone, to be replaced by a clothes shop.
This shop sold knitwear and pottery; the shop name is directed at a tourist market, and the coracle outside the pottery is a further 'prop' to entice customers. It has not lasted.
Hewitts, the Free Church of 1913 and the hall beyond were demolished in 1963 and replaced by the tawdry flat-roofed three-storey Sycamore House flats, offices and shops.
J W Ebbs' electrical shop next door was once an ironmonger's, and was run by the father and grandfather of Sir David Frost.
The shops on the right testify to the wide range of services available at the time: Stephens and Johnson, ironmongers; Bateman, forage contractor; Flights Military Outfitters; the Magpie, sweets
Woolworths, on the site of the Lion Inn, can just be seen beyond the third shop blind.
These shops serve an outlying part of Corringham: they are the usual mix of grocer, newsagent and hardware shop.
Places (10)
Photos (2534)
Memories (8172)
Books (0)
Maps (71)