Places
30 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Trerice Manor, Cornwall
- Iford Manor, Wiltshire
- Manor Royal, Sussex
- Manor, The, Sussex
- Manor Estate, Yorkshire
- Cliton Manor, Bedfordshire
- Owton Manor, Cleveland
- Manor Bourne, Devon
- Manor Park, Berkshire
- Manor Park, Sussex
- Manor Parsley, Cornwall
- Sutton Manor, Merseyside
- Burton Manor, Staffordshire
- Manor Park, Nottinghamshire
- Reen Manor, Cornwall
- Uphill Manor, Avon
- Manor Park, Buckinghamshire
- Walton Manor, Oxfordshire
- Hood Manor, Cheshire
- Weston Manor, Isle of Wight
- Landguard Manor, Isle of Wight
- Ruislip Manor, Greater London
- Wightwick Manor, West Midlands
- Manor House, West Midlands
- Manor Powis, Central Scotland
- Manor Park, Greater London
- Manor Hill Corner, Lincolnshire
- Manor Park, Yorkshire (near Sheffield)
- Manor Park, Cheshire (near Middlewich)
- Manor Park, Yorkshire (near Ilkley)
Photos
1,162 photos found. Showing results 281 to 300.
Maps
175 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 337 to 1.
Memories
726 memories found. Showing results 141 to 150.
I Lived And Worked Nearby
We lived as a family in Gonville Road with St Judes Church on the corner of Thornton Road, to the left of this picture. I remember the Pond when it was full of rubbish so this garden was an improvement when it was ...Read more
A memory of Thornton Heath by
Heather Jones
I was in Manor Road Children's Home and at Xmas we stood in a line to pick a second-hand toy from a tressel table which people gave to the home. I was at the back and I picked a doll with a china head that had a hole in, but to me it was wonderful. Oh, so many memories...
A memory of Romford in 1948 by
Working In Clyffe Pypard
I came down from Scotland when I was 16 & was a nanny in Broad Hinton for a year for Mr & Mrs Huddy (can't remember the name of the house), & then I decided that I wanted to work with horses, so I got a job ...Read more
A memory of Clyffe Pypard in 1969 by
Laneswood The Home
As quite young boys of then 7 and 6, my brother and I with our parents, over Christmas in 1945 soon after the end of WWII came across from Holland, to visit our grand-parents who lived in "Laneswood", a true manor house standing ...Read more
A memory of Mortimer by
Our Camelot...
Our little family of Mom, Dad, (Nan and Tom Mackie) my four year old sister Dorothy and myself seven years older, moved from the North to U Slaughter where my Dad and Mom were hired as butler/valet to Major Witts (Dad) and cook ...Read more
A memory of Upper Slaughter in 1948 by
Nicholson Family
My mother, Mary Nicholson, was the daughter of Otho Francis Macmahon Nicholson, the son of Henry Donaldson Nicholson. My mother met my father, a first generation South African, during World War 2 when he served in the Merchant ...Read more
A memory of Tavistock by
Middlezoy Manor? Question.
Please, does anyone from the area know about Middlezoy Manor? I assume it no longer exists... am having difficulty discovering its fate, or much by way of more modern reference to the property. Our interest is due to the ...Read more
A memory of Middlezoy by
Wandle Wanderer
This photo is looking towards the 1890 view of the snuff mills and the end of Bridges Lane. The footpath on the right connected to Beddington Lane and was our route to the park as children. The wall on the right was pock marked with ...Read more
A memory of Beddington by
Kenyngton Manor School 1957 Looking For Rosemary Hall & Colin Tanner
I left the School in the Summer of 1957 - does anyone remember Rosemary and Colin? We went to see the Opera 'Madam Butterfly' in London. Carol Storey
A memory of Sunbury by
The Majesty Of Fenton Town Hall
I was about five years old and at my mother's side as we passed across the entrance to the great hall on our way to the Sunday school trip to Rhyl. We walked about two hundred yards further joining a ...Read more
A memory of Fenton by
Captions
690 captions found. Showing results 337 to 360.
It was brought back from Italy by Sir Hubert Miller, the Lord of the Manor; similar statues adorn many of the buildings in Upper Froyle, giving it the name 'The Village of the Saints'.
Combe Martin (or Combmartin as it was known until the 1890s) takes its name from Robert FitzMartin, the first lord of the manor, whose family retained the title until the 14th century.
Combe Martin (or Combmartin as it was known until the 1890s) takes its name from Robert FitzMartin, the first lord of the manor, whose family retained the title until the 14th century.
Tickenhill Manor at Bewdley was given to the Mortimer family by William the Conqueror, coming back to the Crown at the time of Edward IV.
This later photograph shows Manor Farm after the plaster had been removed from the timber frame, and also those 18th-century mansard-roofed cottages more closely.
farm land began to be sold off for development, and the village supports a post office and general store, together with two pubs - The Dog and Duck and The Ferguson Fawsitt, named after the lord of the manor
Bayons Manor was built by the uncle of Lincolnshire's famous son, Alfred Lord Tennyson.
It was here that the ancestors of George Washington were lords of the manor between 1183 and 1376.
The lofty tower of the 14th-century All Saints church rises behind the Archbishop's Manor House and grounds.
The area round the medieval church is unspoilt; besides the church, which has a very recent eastern extension, there is a Victorian school and a fine 18th-century Manor House near the river.
suggested that the remains of Herstmonceux Castle form part of the oldest brick mansion in Britain; it was built in 1441, following a grant from the king to Roger de Fiennes to ‘embattle’ his manor-house
The villagers bought the green from the lord of the manor in 1969. In previous centuries West Burton was a busy industrial hamlet of hand knitters, dyers and wool combers.
Parts of the original castle were incorporated into the 17th-century manor house. The castle appears to have been rebuilt in the 18th century and repaired during the 19th century.
When this happened, bands of men were despatched to Loe Bar to dig a channel to drain off the floodwater, and the Corporation, in accordance with custom, presented the Lord of the Manor with a leather
With the manor, it formerly belonged to the abbey at Athelney, but it fell into disuse after the Dissolution until Sir Thomas Acland restored it in the 19th century.
Parts of the original castle were incorporated into the 17th-century manor house. The castle appears to have been rebuilt in the 18th century and repaired during the 19th century.
The building on the right is the Manor House.
Begun as a manor house, Bishop Auckland was castellated around 1300, though much of the building shown here dates from the extensive alterations carried out in the 17th and 18th centuries.
The chapel of St Nicholas was built in the 1480s adjacent to his manor house by Sir James Tyrell.
Broughton Castle was built as a fortified manor house by Sir John de Broughton in the 14th century. It was later acquired by William of Wykeham who converted the house into a castle.
In 1541 a large manor house was constructed within the remnants of the old castle. It even incorporated a part of the curtain wall, gatehouse and great tower.
The Street at Lancing was originally part of the main route through North Lancing, but it became an access road after the creation of the manor ground and a by-pass route in the early 19th century.
The cottage on the right houses the Manor Road Stores.
The castle was originally a manor house belonging to the Bishops of Chichester; a licence to crenellate was granted in 1377.
Places (30)
Photos (1162)
Memories (726)
Books (1)
Maps (175)