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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 191 to 200.
Remembering
I was brought up in Mossley and have lots of happy memories. My sister Dot still lives there, she fills me in on what is going on. I now live in Florida but will always be a part of Mossley which I took so much for granted while living ...Read more
A memory of Mossley by
Hassocks Primary School In The 1950s
I was at the school from 1948 until 1955, at which point the 11+ sent me to Hove County Grammar. Starting in 1948 in Miss Wood's class I ended with two years in the top class with Miss Nichols. In between I was ...Read more
A memory of Hassocks by
Sully Hospital History
Just bought a flat in the converted "old" hospital (October 2007). Want to research history of Hospital. Anyone have any Memories, pictures ect please very much appreciated. jasja@msn.com
A memory of Sully by
Shopping In Newmarket On Saturday
SATURDAY MARKET DAY IN NEWMARKET, exactly how I remember it as a 5 year old. On the left next to the Rutland Arms in the center left of the picture was a small street called Palace Street. My father was born here ...Read more
A memory of Newmarket by
St Fagans
I was so pleased to find these photos of the gardens, as there don't seem to be very many around. My grandfather Trevor Dimond was the head gardener there. He started just after the war and was there for 30 years and boy, did he and his men ...Read more
A memory of Wenvoe by
Transporter Bridge
As a child brought up in Yorkshire, we spent holidays visiting family across the Pennines; mother's family in Liverpool and father's in Runcorn. Although he had done well, now a country doctor, father always seemed to think he was ...Read more
A memory of Runcorn by
From 1944
Memories from that long ago tend to stick in the back of the mind until an association brings them out. Being a small child, the village green at Bearsted seemed gigantic and the village pond was just a pond. We used to paddle in the pond ...Read more
A memory of Bearsted by
Westerham From 1954 1965
I moved to Westerham in 1954 from London aged 7.. the smogs were too much. I went to Hosey School and remember teachers, especially Mr Goldsmith. Memories include parading outside the school and raising our caps when ...Read more
A memory of Westerham by
Memories Of Stanford Le Hope
I too have many memories of Stanford-le-Hope. I was born in Orsett hospital. My mother came from South Wales whilst my father came from Ashford in Middlesex. The reason they came to live here was my aunt and ...Read more
A memory of Stanford-le-Hope
George Street
I remember my gran telling me about when her father was killed in Caerau. The day after they brought him home, a couple of miners turned up at his home with his leg which was cut off in a sack. I aways remember the hooters, in Caerau and ...Read more
A memory of Caerau by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 457 to 480.
The original circular window above was replaced by the two round-arched windows in the late 15th century.
Maiden Newton has been a much-appreciated centre for walking holidays in recent years, for many of the best villages and beauty spots on the Dorset downlands are within reach.
When Henry VIII's topographer John Leland travelled from Poole to Wimborne in 1542, he noted passing over a bridge with '12 good arches'.
Today's traffic has brought lights around a much-reduced traffic island, which has lost the trees and shrubs.
Its twin brick arches, surmounted by a central clock tower, make it a curiously modern-looking building.
The village is more well-known for its much-visited stately home, Penshurst Place - its entrance arch can be seen at the bottom of the lane.
This imposing Italianate building, with its lofty round-arched windows, was built by Cuthbert Brodrick in the late 1860s. It later became the Civic Theatre.
The wide arched entrance to The New Inn is a reminder that Lechlade was once an important coaching town.
The Barbican, the security tunnel through the centre arch, was added in the 13th century; it is the only remaining barbican in England.
Apart from the heavier loss of life during the so called Great War, men then overwhelmingly joined the army with local conflict saw a much wider variety of occupations in the armed forces,
The chancel arch is a striking feature of the church, as is the 15th-century tower.
A much busier view of the same scene some forty years after photograph No 60881.
According to Nikolaus Pevsner, the original design was spoilt by the addition of an arched window to the west of the Venetian windows, and the small west tower.
When the river is in flood, it also flows through the arches on the extreme right. A family stand by the high weir in the foreground. This is the site of an ancient watermill.
At a much later date, in 1997, the Abbeyfield Society took over the premises and opened Abbeyfield House, providing sheltered accommodation for the elderley.
At the time of writing, the arched Market Hall building on the left is a building site. The bay windows on the right are still in existence.
A close-up view of the roadside trees forming an arch. The Norman church is just visible through the trees, beyond a horse and cart.
Whitmore Way was the site of Basildon's first proper shopping parade: this included a chemist, a hardware shop, a post office, a Martin's newsagent, a Home & Colonial store, and a much-needed chip-shop
In this view of the stone-walled canal basin we see the cathedral rising over the roofs, and the old arched bridge.
St Richard, whose brightly painted statue is in the niche above the double arch, was Bishop from 1245 to 1253; he was canonised by the Pope in 1262.
It is interesting to note that the brick cottages in the centre have a timber-framed gable end, revealing a much older origin than the brickwork suggests.
Turning left out of Castle Hill, Bailgate follows the course of the Roman Ermine Street towards the old Roman north gate from the city, the Newport Arch.
Riverside beeches frame Baslow's three-arched medieval bridge at Nether End, as it strides across the River Derwent with elegant ease.
This is a much-changed scene along the road leading to Maidenhead Station, for virtually nothing now survives of King Street's earlier buildings.
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