Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chatsworth House, Derbyshire
 - Osborne House, Isle of Wight
 - Brambletye House, Sussex
 - Ickworth House, Suffolk
 - Kingston Lacy House, Dorset
 - Boscobel House, Shropshire
 - Preshute House, Wiltshire
 - Bolton Houses, Lancashire
 - Brick Houses, Yorkshire
 - Quaking Houses, Durham
 - Water Houses, Yorkshire
 - Bottom House, Staffordshire
 - New House, Kent
 - Mite Houses, Cumbria
 - Lyneham House, Devon
 - Church Houses, Yorkshire
 - Dye House, Northumberland
 - Spittal Houses, Yorkshire
 - Street Houses, Yorkshire
 - Tow House, Northumberland
 - Halfway House, Shropshire
 - Halfway Houses, Kent
 - High Houses, Essex
 - Flush House, Yorkshire
 - White House, Suffolk
 - Wood House, Lancashire
 - Bank Houses, Lancashire
 - Lower House, Cheshire
 - Marsh Houses, Lancashire
 - Chapel House, Lancashire
 - Close House, Durham
 - Guard House, Yorkshire
 - Hundle Houses, Lincolnshire
 - Hundred House, Powys
 - Thorley Houses, Hertfordshire
 - School House, Dorset
 
Photos
7,776 photos found. Showing results 381 to 400.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 457 to 1.
Memories
10,360 memories found. Showing results 191 to 200.
My Favourite Haunt
My memories scan over 50 years, I lived in Anhalt Road and then Ethelburga Street and spent countless hours in the Park. The funfare, with fireworks every Friday night for the end of war celebrations, the tree walk along the ...Read more
A memory of Battersea in 1950 by
The Nag''s Head
One didn't have to travel to London in the past to watch pro bands plying their trade. The Nag's Head public house was a much attended venue during the late 1960s and early 1970s for watching many of the (what was then known as) ...Read more
A memory of Wollaston in 1969 by
The Palace Cinema
The pub on the left of the picture was renowned for a few brawls in it's time, originally called The Globe (now known as Raferty's) I recall walking down Cambridge St and seeing a man being hurled through the window into the ...Read more
A memory of Wellingborough in 1968 by
Carnforth Lodge Lancaster Road
As a child in the 1960’s and 70’s I went several times with my family to visit Mrs Esther Pomfret (Auntie Ettie to us; she was a relation of my father's) at Carnforth Lodge, Lancaster Road. I don't think this is shown ...Read more
A memory of Carnforth by
1948
Edgware Middlesex, the cradle of my childhood,and Burnt Oak is where I went with Mummy as a special treat , we used to go into Lyons corner house for a nice cup of tea and a small treat, and it seems like only yesterday the whole family went ...Read more
A memory of Burnt Oak in 1948 by
History Of Clayton Family 1700s
Descendants of George Clayton Generation No. 1 1. GEORGE1 CLAYTON was born 1788 in Pickhill, West Roxby, Yorkshire England. He married ANN MUDD 08 December 1806 in Pickhill, West Roxby, Yorkshire England. She was ...Read more
A memory of Pickhill in 1860 by
My Nan And Grandad
my nan and grandad both lived in the second house down in this picture next too the car, ron and jean elkins
A memory of Westbury by
The Bower
I moved to the Bower in 1945 with my parents and two brothers. We lived there until 1952 when we imigrated to Canada. The road takes a fairly sharp turn to the right just in front of the house and on Guy Fox night we used to turn off all the ...Read more
A memory of Hever in 1945 by
My Time At The Camp.
I was born in Minehead, and have also lived in Kitswell, Dunster, Williton, Timberscombe and Rodhuish, and attended all the schools. My first job after leaving Minehead School in December 1958, was at the fruit and salad farm by ...Read more
A memory of Minehead in 1962 by
Childhood Memories
I moved to Freshford with my family when I was 12 years old and lived at The Inn for 5 years before moving away. We did not have the wall on the end of the building that you see in the foreground. By then a large car park had ...Read more
A memory of Freshford in 1964 by
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Captions
6,977 captions found. Showing results 457 to 480.
Sir Walter Gilbey, whose name is associated with the Elsenham Jam Company, at one time lived at Elsenham Hall, a house set in wooded parkland.
Opposite is Roebuck House, which dates from the late 14th century. The shop is now a private house.
A neatly manicured gravel driveway in front of the manor house in Fulbourn.
A neatly manicured gravel driveway in front of the manor house in Fulbourn.
The immaculate gabled timber-framed house, built as Hartshorne House in 1576, was described in 1863 as 'too dilapidated to allow the lowest to find shelter beneath its roof'.
Here they lead up the motte to the Castle House, which now houses the town's museum.
In the grounds of the house there is also a timber-framed tree-house that Queen Victoria played in as a child.
Ann of Cleves House is possibly the most impressive of Ditchling's 16th- and 17th-century buildings.
It overlooks the village of Hope and the gabled house known as Moorgate (centre right), which now serves as a Countrywide (formerly Co-operative) Holidays Association guest house.
The Dun Cow public house, on the opposite side of the road, has closed, and now houses financial offices. The village has grown quite considerably since the mid 1950s.
Also known as the Blind House from its lack of windows, the Roundhouse was the village lock-up. Built in 1779, it sometimes held children playing truant from school.
The houses on the left have been altered in a reasonably complimentary manner, but to the right the mature trees have gone, and the 18th-century garden wall has been mostly demolished to form
The vicar of St George's envisaged a need for a hospital, and so in 1866 he set up a hospital in a house on the corner of Cross Street and Albert Street - it became known as St George's Hospital.
The focal point of Forty Hill in the 16th century was the great house of Elsynge, which lay between the site of Forty Hall and the Turkey Brook.
This photograph shows the house with its two towers. The stable block is linked to the house by an archway (right).
The building nearest the camera, Rainsford House, was built around the turn of the century. From1924 it housed the town's municipal offices, but was eventually replaced by a new Civic Centre.
Here Cooper's house can be seen across the lily-covered lake. The house has now gone, but the gardens, which fell into decay, are now being restored.
Between 1900 and 1905 Vickers built Vickerstown on Walney Island, an estate to house shipyard workers.
West Hill House, right, at the corner of Market Hill and Quarr Barton, is Grade II* listed; it was the home and surgery of Dr James for 42 years.
Northumberland House, the Duke of Northumberland's residence, was demolished in 1874 to make way for Northumberland Avenue. The photographer is standing in Trafalgar Square.
A RAC or AA motorcycle rider, without his motorbike, is walking past a row of Elizabethan houses in Friday Street. Henley, with its medieval street plan, has over 300 listed buildings.
The Manor House C1960 The 16th-century half-timbered Manor House in Vyne Road fronts directly onto the road, so that its striking architecture, including carved bargeboards on the gables, can
Although housing a restaurant at the time this picture was taken, the building has since been converted and split into two private houses.
We can just see the second Hunsdon public house, the Fox and Hounds, in the distance on the left, with houses in Tanner's Way (on the opposite side of the road) behind.
Places (80)
Photos (7776)
Memories (10360)
Books (1)
Maps (370)

