Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Low Row, Yorkshire
- Low Bentham, Yorkshire
- Low Hutton, Yorkshire (near Malton)
- Low Fell, Tyne and Wear
- Low Dalby, Yorkshire
- Lowe, Shropshire
- Fenton Low, Staffordshire
- Low Leighton, Derbyshire
- Low Marnham, Nottinghamshire
- Low Snaygill, Yorkshire
- Low Street, Essex
- Low Town, Shropshire
- Low Valleyfield, Fife
- Low Angerton, Northumberland
- Low Barugh, Yorkshire
- Low Bradley, Yorkshire
- Low Ellington, Yorkshire
- Low Fulney, Lincolnshire
- Low Gate, Northumberland
- Low Laithe, Yorkshire
- Cauldon Lowe, Staffordshire
- Low Barlings, Lincolnshire
- Low Bradfield, Yorkshire
- Low Burnham, Humberside
- Low Grantley, Yorkshire
- Low Hauxley, Northumberland
- Low Hawsker, Yorkshire
- Low Hesket, Cumbria
- Lowes Barn, Durham
- Low Whita, Yorkshire
- Low Torry, Fife
- Low Valley, Yorkshire
- Low Westwood, Durham
- Low Worsall, Yorkshire
- Lowe Hill, Staffordshire
- Low Borrowbridge, Cumbria
Photos
267 photos found. Showing results 281 to 267.
Maps
509 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
636 memories found. Showing results 141 to 150.
Former Pupil 1957 1963
My maiden name is Lynda Roworth, and I have fond memories of attending Rotherham High School for Girls. I played hockey (right wing) for the school team - Christine Cutts was the first captain I remember. We rarely had school ...Read more
A memory of Rotherham by
Letham Glen
Not sure if the year is right, could be earlier, but I took part in the Go as you Please competitions held in Letham Glen, and won nearly every time, my prize - a free ticket into the Troxy Cinema, it was great!! The pianist at the ...Read more
A memory of Leven in 1955 by
Growing Up In Buildwas
I was known as Katie Baker, I lived at No.4 Park View. Looking back life was simple, enjoying the changes of the seasons knowing you would be snowed in in winter, and flooded out in the spring. Watching the boar come up the ...Read more
A memory of Buildwas by
Chapel And The Pictures.
On Sunday evenings my friend Duncan and I had to go from Crook to Fir Tree to 'blow the organ' in the little chapel. Our station for this was a tiny room over the chapel and the process was to pump a handle up and down to ...Read more
A memory of Fir Tree in 1930 by
Almondsbury South Gloucester
Where do I start ? Living in Monmouth House on the top of Almondsbury Hill. going to Almondsbury village school sitting next to Tony Evans, head of the Patchway gang & a brilliant football goalkeeper. Gaffer ...Read more
A memory of Almondsbury in 1940 by
Ackworth
My grandparents (Mr and Mrs Scorah) used to live in Town End Avenue, Low Ackworth. I remember visiting them with my mother, while my dad was at war. We used to catch the bus from Scunthorpe to Waterdale, Doncaster. Then we would dash ...Read more
A memory of Ackworth in 1940 by
Statutory Swingin'
As a young lad in the “swingin 60’s”, the swingin’ rather passed me by … and no regrets there. But the word puts me in mind of the swinging we did do. Just down the lane from Allsopp’s garage – the hallowed source of ...Read more
A memory of Ashby-de-la-Zouch in 1969 by
19 C Ancestors At Cleugh Head Farm Low Row
I have been researching my name which is very rare and found that a Scottish family of that name were farm workers at Cleugh Head Farm in the 1851 Census. I cannot find any subsequent ...Read more
A memory of Low Row by
Norwich Art School
I attended Norwich Art School about 1963. Long hair, self opinionated, and arrogant (I thought I was a beatnik) with a long haired girlfriend, Barbara Lowe. I remember especially the night about six of us climbed across the roof ...Read more
A memory of Norwich in 1963 by
Whitlow Family Of Thewall
I don't know if this picture relates to my family or not! I am a descendant of the Whitlow family of Thewall, in the mid 1700's onwards. There is a large ground stone in St Marys churchyard in Rostherne, about the first row ...Read more
A memory of Padgate by
Captions
477 captions found. Showing results 337 to 360.
Here is a fascinating picture taken from the newly built block of flats, Low Cross Court.
Holidaymakers may not always have known about the 130 or so Iron Age hut circles that exist on Gateholm Island, accessible at low tide.
In the village are a good variety of houses, including the early 16th- century rectory and Hallside Grove, a Gothicised house of quality set behind the low wall on the left of the photo- graph.
Coltishall is the gateway to the Broads, set on a low hill above the winding Bure.
Here in Low Harrogate hotels and stylish crescents were built, attracting a very high-class visitor. The Pump Room here was constructed in 1842 over the sulphur wells.
The quay at Wells is now stranded a mile from the open sea. The harbour was developed by the railway companies – wagons of the London Midland Scottish Line are drawn up at the quayside.
Here in Low Harrogate hotels and stylish crescents were built, attracting a very good class of visitor. The Pump Room was constructed in 1842 over the sulphur wells.
Compared to the new road bridge (left) the railway bridge on the right seems so clumsy – its foundations had to be built under the water, and go down some 45 feet below the low-water mark
The Brue drains a major section of the Somerset Levels to Glastonbury and beyond; the Victorian sluices in the distance are a vital part of maintaining water levels and preventing flooding of the low-lying
There is also a Victorian east window and niches to left and right of the low panelled chancel arch. The tall west tower has diagonal buttresses, with buttress shafts and pinnacles in relief.
The low tide has left a good deal of Tate Hill sands uncovered.
These were local boats built with a strong hull so they could sit on the mud at low tide, even with a full cargo on board.
The height of the mast can clearly be seen on the moored wherry on the right of the picture; it would have to be laid flat to negotiate the many low road bridges on the Broads.
The building seen in the photograph appears as an atmospheric drinkers' dream pub, with its low doorway stepping down into a dark panelled bar, with its inevitably yellowy-brown smoke-stained ceiling.
The roofs of the nave and south aisle are so low that a first glance at St Michael's often leaves visitors thinking that the building is semi-derelict.
These small low-cost windpumps were quite widely used in the Broads area; similar mills are preserved at Upton and How Hill, and can be visited.
Outside Holroyd's shop and post office is a sign warning of a low bridge ahead. Opposite this leafy corner was the vicarage, now a private house.
The incoming tide, of course, cleared the beach until the next low water.
Across Poole Road, the low railing offered easy access to the fields of the Dean's Court Estate. The pub dates back at least to the 18th century, and parts of the building are even older.
The Plaiting School in the village employed village ladies and children who supplemented the low agricultural wages by weaving strips of straw, called plait, to the hat-making trade in Luton.
The low door on the right marked the chief telegraph office of Belfast, and in 1870 it was open seven days a week from 6am to 3am by Greenwich Mean Time.
Above are 14th-century west towers, and beyond the great central tower soars, which can be seen from many locations in the low-rise town and beyond.
The long, low 17th-century house, right, has fine stone-mullioned and drip- headed windows.
The Town Hall was built in 1881 to a design by John Lowe with a pavilion roof and tall chimney pots. Just as striking is the Town Hall Tavern, black and white, next to it on the left.
Places (90)
Photos (267)
Memories (636)
Books (0)
Maps (509)