Places
9 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
283 photos found. Showing results 201 to 220.
Maps
50 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 241 to 1.
Memories
271 memories found. Showing results 101 to 110.
The Old Andover Grammar School
This building, now a museum was in the 1940s the home of a famous old Andover gentleman Mr A C Bennett. He wrote a book about Andover St Mary's Church and played the organ in the church. He was also my piano teacher at 2 ...Read more
A memory of Andover in 1940 by
The Village
In 1959 I was 10 years old and the village was my big adventure trip out when I went to the shops for my mum. Upper Belvedere was always known as The Village when I lived there, is it still I wonder? I even went to school there too, ...Read more
A memory of Belvedere in 1959 by
Graham Clive Cale James
Between 1938-1949 I lived in Llanarth Road then at Bryn Road 1949-1959. There was no Springfield Estate (only Springfield Villas, about 6 houses). Tradespeople at that time were Davies the bakers with door to door ...Read more
A memory of Pontllanfraith in 1940 by
Fish Chips
Having fish & chips from the Vesta Cafe on the New Road, they were the best. Playing the puggy at Favali's in the New Road. Playing down at the Newton Shore. Skating at Ayr Ice Rink. Climbing the fence and getting into the dog track from ...Read more
A memory of Ayr in 1948 by
Evacuation From London To Harpley
I remember Harpley as a four-year-old, when it had no running water, electricity or gas. I was evacuated there when first born, in 1939 during the war years and stayed in a cottage opposite to the village ...Read more
A memory of Harpley in 1940 by
Training
I must have been one of the first on the training ship because I thought it was 1954 I was there, but if it is recorded as c1955 who am I to argue! I was there training for the merchant navy for about 12 weeks. I was the camp bugler until ...Read more
A memory of Sharpness in 1955 by
Dysart Old Toll House And Harbour
I have many great memories of Dysart with my Gran Jane (Jean Allan and John (Big Jock) Allan. Last address together was 13 The Braes Dysart. On the hill on the road to Meickles Coalmine. We used to collect coal on the ...Read more
A memory of Dysart in 1950 by
When The Pond Froze Over
I was living at Bishopstoke and working as a lad at Cunliff Owen Aircraft during that cold war time winter when a friend that lived in Fair Oak told me that Fishers pond was frozen over and people were skating on it. I ...Read more
A memory of Fisher's Pond in 1943 by
Happy Daze, Happy Holidaze
My memories take me back to South Bragar as a young boy of 9. My father, Angus Murray, born in No.30 moved to Glasgow many years before. But then and till this day I still go back with my family and tell them probably to ...Read more
A memory of South Uist in 1972 by
Born On Estate
My birth certificate 1938 says Roseneath; father was a gardner on the estate and have photos of the estate cottage. Also pictures of reputedly oldest trees in Scotland called Adam and Eve, probably long chopped down as castle. Prince ...Read more
A memory of Rosneath in 1930 by
Captions
293 captions found. Showing results 241 to 264.
The old harbour stands on the shores of the Mawddach estuary, and was formerly of some importance. Nearby, the viewpoint of Dinas Oleu was the National Trust's first property.
George's Dock was built out from the original shore-line and opened in 1771.
It was also a desolate scene when John Constable spent his honeymoon here in 1816 with the Fisher family in the vicarage, and painted 'Osmington Shore, near Weymouth' which now hangs in the Louvre.
This must be one of the last photographs of the old military hospital at Netley before most of it disappeared from the shores of Southampton Water in a huge heap of rubble.
This is how a guide to seaside resorts of 1895 described Rhyl: 'Not many years ago there was no town here at all, but merely a few fishermen's huts upon the shore.
This is how a guide to seaside resorts of 1895 described Rhyl: 'Not many years ago there was no town here at all, but merely a few fishermen's huts upon the shore.
Further west the shore bulges out round the promontory of the Wish Tower, in fact a Martello tower or fortlet built in large numbers to defend the coast from Napoleon.
Further west the shore bulges out round the promontory of the Wish Tower, in fact a Martello tower or fortlet built in large numbers to defend the coast from Napoleon.
This is the road down to the shore (and Red Bank Farm). Red Bank is one of the spots from which you can cross the sands over to Kents Bank.
There was once a Roman Saxon Shore Fort here. Its bricks were later used to build the towers we see here, known locally as the 'two sisters' (see Davington).
But in 1870, twenty-six years before this photograph was taken, it became steam-operated; this resulted in the building of the Ferry Hotel on the western shore in 1879.
This quaint inland port was built originally for Roman galleys to service Richborough in the face of a receding shore line.
Deck chairs on the paving and on the kerb above, concrete pillars, a wall to obscure the view and a rocky shore at high tide seem to invite only the intrepid holidaymaker.
The name Hoylake refers to Hoyle Lake, a deep-water anchorage just off the shore and favoured by ships transporting cargoes of goods and passengers either along the Dee Estuary or into Liverpool.
The present foreground view remains similar to this picture, but the area between the far side of the lake and the shore has been transformed by the buildings of the Ocean Plaza retail and
The name of this historic village derives from the flatfish called 'flukes', caught off the shore in Morecombe Bay. There is a poster for cocoa in the window of the Co-op shop on the left.
Helston Penrose Walk 1913 Penrose Walk runs from the bottom end of Coronation Park down to the Loe and follows its shore to Penrose.
Known today for its massive castle, one of Edward I's chain of fortresses built to subdue the Welsh, this town on the shore of the Menai Strait at the mouth of the River Seiont is now staunchly Welsh-speaking
The entry for Southport in one 1921 guidebook states: 'on the once lonely shore has now developed a very attrac- tive seaside-resort and residential town, whose fine streets, notably Lord Street, challenge
This shore establish- ment gave its young recruits a stiff taste of discipline to fit them for their careers in the Navy.
On the right-hand shore the B4405 snakes along towards Cross Foxes and Dolgellau.
This picture shows the Trossachs Hotel situated on the northern shore, and the wooded slopes of Sron Armailte.
Sailing was one of the favourite pastimes of the wealthy late 19th-century 'off-comers' who built houses close to the shore of the lake.
On the shore, registered M26, is Annie, a 23-ton trawling ketch with a 45ft keel; owned by George Rowe of Harding Street, it carried 2 men and a boy.
Places (9)
Photos (283)
Memories (271)
Books (1)
Maps (50)