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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 201 to 210.
Ystrad Hall
I was a member of Ystrad Hall also - I don't remember you Billy Crawford, what year was you there? Llangollen was a great place, I believe there was a lot of child molesting going on that's why you don't hear much about this strange ...Read more
A memory of Llangollen by
School Holidays
My grandparents and my mother come from Llanbradach Plasturtwyn Terr; I spent every school holiday and Christmas there. I remember my nan sending me to Snook's shop for a couple slices of ham and putting it on the book to pay Friday. ...Read more
A memory of Bedwas
Crewe 1924 1961
My earliest memory is sitting watching the trains thunder over the Cumberland bridge opposite our house in Market Street(1925). We were then moved to 24 Timbrell Ave, it later became 124, we lived there until 1943. During that time, I ...Read more
A memory of Crewe by
The Haunted Farm House, Auldgirth
i went to school with one of the daughters who lived in this house she said it was very creepy. last year 2013 my son attended closeburn nursery with a little girl whos family are now living there and they said ...Read more
A memory of Auldgirth by
North Greenford In The Late 40s And 50s
I was born in Perivale Maternity Hospital in 1943. Like so many of your writers growing up then was a magical time; the freedom we had to wander the fields, play and fish in the canal (in homemade boats that ...Read more
A memory of Greenford by
The Bed Bug Weathervane!
St Mary’s Church at Kingsclere, north west of Basingstoke, is famous for a most unusual decoration, a weather-vane in the shape of a bed-bug, seen on the left hand side of the tower in this view. It is a very tasteful ...Read more
A memory of Kingsclere by
My Memories Of Bretherdale
I am currently living in a middle of a field in Breatherdale. Betherdale will always will be in my memories because it is the place I grew up. When I was little Bretherdale was a lush green place to be! But as I got ...Read more
A memory of Selside by
Living In Brentford In The 50's & 60's.
Hi my name is Barbara Ottewill (Nee Hutchinson). I have just had a very enjoyable walk down memory lane by reading articles about growing up in Brentford, written by Alf Winkworth, Eunice Burridge and Pat ...Read more
A memory of Brentford by
Long Lost Brother
I have just traced my long lost birth brother; John Foulds from Ashton Street - I had searched for 30 years to find him. There's no happy ending as I found out he passed away in 2006. I have been unable to find a photo ...Read more
A memory of Easington Colliery by
Lost Memory
Hi, does anybody remember the Coxall family; Violet, William and children Leonard and Ronald. They lived in Spencer Grove, Stoke Newington. They lived here in 1940s. Anything on this family would be much appreciated. I know that Violet ...Read more
A memory of Hackney by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 481 to 504.
The 16th-century stone bridge steps quietly by way of its five arches across the reedy Rothley Brook; the original roadway into the village is now reduced to a footpath.
Out of sight, screened by trees, is the parish churchyard and the Victorian church; to the south of the church stands the old font in a niche below a 13th-century arch from the old church
The magnificence of the church was rather spoilt by the 18th-century red brick tower with classical blank arches and windows (see photograph 35493), built after much of the medieval tower
Between them are the solid shapes of Sundial Cottage and Library Cottage, and No 11 with its gabled frontage above an arched doorway (centre right).
Behind the mini-van on the left, the Butchers Arms had replaced a much older half- timbered building damaged extensively by fire in 1939.
One such can be seen sandwiched between two barges. The Anderton Lift created a much faster passage for boats and increased the tonnage of river traffic to 226,000 in 1913.
After a disastrous fire in 1174, the new choir was designed by William of Sens, a French master mason who was versed in the Gothic style of northern France, with its pointed arches and universal stone-built
It is thought that Macbeth may have lived at Inverness Castle, or used it as a base for operations against the Orcadians.The suspension bridge superseded a stone bridge of seven arches which was destroyed
The chancel arch and font date from this time, the tower is late 14th-century and the south aisle was added during a restoration of 1531.
This view is taken from the brick four-centred arch into Market Square. The brick footpath heads towards the porch which, with the south aisle, was added in 1870 to designs by H E Rumble.
This is a much changed view: the working barges have gone, to be replaced by ranks of houseboats.
This is a much more recent view of this district of Worthing. Nearby there is a large old cemetery and chapel, with many graves of the wealthy.
Here at Fleshwick, visitors can explore this superb natural arch.
This photograph, taken from the east bank of the river, south of the Barley Mow pub, manages to exclude George Gilbert Scott's rather fine 1864 seven-arched brick bridge over the river.
His poem about the embittered fisherman Peter Grimes inspired an opera by a much later and better known resident, Benjamin Britten.
When Leeds town hall was opened by Queen Victoria, the streets were lined with palm trees and triumphal arches.
Here it can be seen at the end of the street, past the Lion Hotel and the arched entrance to the British Legion Club.
Coping stones now surround the edge of the lake, and the arch of roses that spanned Picklefoot Spring at the point where it emerges has been constructed.
An inscription on the underside of the central arch reveals that the bridge was 'finished in the year 1813 by John Dyson, Engineer, Jesse Bushrod, Mason.` Inside the downstream parapet, an 1827
statue of the Duke of Wellington seated on his horse, Copenhagen, has been situated on Round Hill since 1885, when it was brought from Hyde Park Corner in London where it had dwarfed the Constitution Arch
The second light stands a little way behind, in the town, a much taller tower modelled on the Pharos light of ancient Alexandria.
Not far from the cafe is the four-arch sandstone bridge over the Derwent, built in 1775 by York architect John Carr.
The arched footbridge gives access over the River Brett, which flows through the village.
This building replaced a much smaller church on the same site. The construction of the new St Augustine's began in 1865; dedication by the Bishop of Llandaff followed the next year.
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