Places
3 places found.
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Photos
1,000 photos found. Showing results 301 to 320.
Maps
22 maps found.
Books
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Memories
912 memories found. Showing results 151 to 160.
1973 Demolition Year For The Market Buildings
I arrived in Wolverhampton when demolition of the market buildings was under way. The buildings in front of the church (in the photo) must have already been long gone, but the buildings on the side of ...Read more
A memory of Wolverhampton
My Memories Of Drum Chapel In It's Infancy
I lived in Tallant Terrace from the early fifties until the family moved to Cumbernauld in 1969. At that time, Jedworth Avenue etc was not yet built. There was a gunsite there, and we used to play hide and ...Read more
A memory of Drumchapel by
A Handy Short Cut
This led down to Castle Terrace where my Auntie Lizzie Cuthbert lived. If I had no money to spend in the baker's, I could nip down here on my way to school. We could course also see the stepping stones - a source of wet feet ...Read more
A memory of Anstruther Easter by
Vine House Farm Nene Terrace
Not so much a memory, but I'm researching my family tree and my family, the Patmans, lived in Nene Terrace at Vine House Farm. My great grandfather is Arthur George, born in 1899 and died 1964, he was married to Vivian Paul ...Read more
A memory of Crowland by
Find Family
Born railway terrace tottenham n 17 next to railway bridge in white hart lane family cant and johnson went to st frances de sales then onto risley avenue would love to hear from anyone remembering me very hard ,but great times rose andrews thanx
A memory of Tottenham by
Lovely Holidays In Fleetwood
I was born in 1942, and most of my hoidays as a child were spent in Fleetwood. We usually stayed in Balmoral Terrace with the McGurk family who had a daughter called Marilyn. They also had a lovely golden spaniel which ...Read more
A memory of Fleetwood by
Stafford Coop
This development included a Coop Department store and a bookshop that I frequented in my teenage years. The Coop skirted around the corner into Stafford Street and two of the original terraced houses on that street were occupied by the ...Read more
A memory of Stafford
Memories
i was born in 1953 in manor park my family moved to Dagenham road 1954 to a new house recently built close to the chase and a short walk to the Farmhouse Pub I can remember the steps leading up to the entrance when only 9-10yrs ...Read more
A memory of Rush Green by
A Beautiful Place
My family roots are from knighton and lloyney, Mona Cadwallader was my aunt she was a midwife in knighton, her sister edith gordon (both nee hammond) was my nan, they lived in lloyney before marriage mona and her husband ken lived in ...Read more
A memory of Knighton
Start Of Western Esplanade From The Pier
This Picture was taken by someone on the Pier, above the roadway. The shops to the right were known then as Palmyra Terrace, IIRC, and the little sunken amusement park to the Left had been renamed by then from "The Shrubbery" to "Peter Pan's Playground".
A memory of Southend-on-Sea by
Captions
549 captions found. Showing results 361 to 384.
The layout of Stamford, climbing gently in terraces up from the Welland, is well shown in this photograph from St Martin's church tower. The churches of All Saints, St John, and St Mary stand out.
When the town was first laid out it was to be an exclusive place, but within a few years, cheap, terraced houses had been built and Atherton's vision was in tatters.
The terraces and buildings in front of the Royal Pier Hotel have been demolished, and rockeries and shrubs planted. There is also a new extension on to the Claremont Hotel.
Apart from one white terrace, the hillside above the fishing village has since been fully developed for housing.
The paved terrace has since gone as part of the more recent flood prevention scheme. Beyond the bandstand are Alfred Everson, boat builder at the Phoenix works, and the Deben Rowing Club.
Next door (right foreground) is Charlotte Terrace, which before its conversion to residential use in 1988 was the Assembly Rooms.
Rutland Terrace remains on the left; the end of the row, on the right, is now the Masonic Hall.
The new portion of the town lies for the most part on high ground, and the commodious houses and charming terraces overlook the magnificent harbour on the one side and the English Channel on the other.
The terrace of shops stepping down the High Street, beyond the busy junction with Carshalton Road and William Pile Ltd (the stuccoed corner building), was erected in 1880.
The road leading to Chipstead Valley is dominated by Edwardian terraced houses on the right.
Hammet Street, with its brick terrace houses, was laid out in 1788 off North Street, focusing on the magnificent late 15th-century tower of St Mary's church.
Eastbourne's Grand Parade consisted of three terraces stretching from the Wish Tower to the Pier; it has been described as 'one of the finest of its kind in England.'
The post office and its sign have now been transferred to the second terrace house. Further down the street is the gable of the Methodist chapel. In the distance is the sign of the Wheatsheaf.
This attractive terrace of houses lies close to the sea on the north side of the Headland, which is beyond the buildings in the centre distance.
This dignified four-storey stucco terrace of about 1870, with its continuous first-floor balcony, was at the south-east corner of The Steyne.
Carlisle Parade, the enormously long stucco terrace, is now truncated, and the middle section has been replaced by flat-roofed brown brick flats of total incongruity.
Thorley’s, the cattle feed merchants, has gone, to be replaced by 1970s shops and offices, while all the old shopfronts have been replaced on the other terraces.
The late Victorian terrace includes the Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen. On the right is the shingle mill, a vast screening plant, which was used to process shingle until 1958.
The apparent terracing between the river and the church is actually hedges on either side of the Marks Tey to Sudbury railway line and of the road from Bures to Sudbury running south to north across
By the time the later photograph was taken, the roof appears to have fallen into disrepair, and it was only a few more years before the building, along with the cramped terraced housing alongside, was
We are looking over the harbour from Marine Terrace. Several of the port's big fleet of topsail schooners can be seen.
There is little apart from the Mini van parked in front of the terraced house on the bottom right of the picture to give away the date of this view, which looks north over Abergynolwyn.
In the foreground, the area right of the road is now a new estate, and opposite is a 1930s brick terrace. The little stone building on the left still stands, and is used as a store.
Here, looking past the tower towards Church Terrace, we can see how close the church was to the ancient castle.
Places (3)
Photos (1000)
Memories (912)
Books (0)
Maps (22)