Places
36 places found.
Did you mean: street or streetly ?
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Heathfield, Sussex (near Cade Street)
- Street, Somerset
- Chester-Le-Street, Durham
- Adwick Le Street, Yorkshire
- Scotch Street, County Armagh
- Friday Street, Surrey
- Potter Street, Essex
- Boughton Street, Kent
- Newgate Street, Hertfordshire
- Streetly, West Midlands
- Shalmsford Street, Kent
- Green Street Green, Greater London
- Boreham Street, Sussex
- Park Street, Hertfordshire
- Cade Street, Sussex
- Appleton-le-Street, Yorkshire
- Hare Street, Hertfordshire (near Buntingford)
- Romney Street, Kent
- Trimley Lower Street, Suffolk
- Streetly End, Cambridgeshire
- Hare Street, Hertfordshire (near Stevenage)
- Brandish Street, Somerset
- Colney Street, Hertfordshire
- Langley Street, Norfolk
- Silver Street, Somerset (near Street)
- Street, Yorkshire (near Glaisdale)
- Street, Lancashire
- Street, Devon
- Street, Cumbria (near Orton)
- Street, Somerset (near Chard)
- Bird Street, Suffolk
- Black Street, Suffolk
- Ash Street, Suffolk
- Broad Street, Wiltshire
- Brome Street, Suffolk
- Penn Street, Buckinghamshire
Photos
24,920 photos found. Showing results 4,301 to 4,320.
Your search returned a large number of results. Please try to refine your search further.
Maps
1,622 maps found.
Books
3 books found. Showing results 5,161 to 3.
Memories
6,666 memories found. Showing results 2,151 to 2,160.
East Wickham And Welling A Magical Time A Magical Life
My family moved into Darenth Road in 1960 - we were the first in our street and watched the rest of the houses being built around us. There was nothing but mud, wheelbarrows and workmen. My dad's ...Read more
A memory of Welling by
My Great Great Grandparents Shop John And Elizabeth Williams
My great great grandparents had a shoeshop and lived at no 10 Scotland Street, Ellesmere, Shropshire. Census records show Thomas and Elizabeth Williams had 6 children there, a lodger, ...Read more
A memory of Ellesmere in 1870 by
Battersea Park
I remember going to Battersea park on Sundays and going in the paddling pool by the jungle. We used to make a day of it having a picnic there. Mum used to get us to save a place by the tennis court so we could hang our costumes up to ...Read more
A memory of Battersea in 1962 by
The War Years
I was born in Hawthorn Street, Millfield in 1930. Went to Diamond Hall School. I remember the day war was declared, my mother said the Germans would bomb us because of all the industry around us. My father was in the Territorial Army ...Read more
A memory of Sunderland in 1943 by
Fordingbridge Fair
A few days after starting school, I paid my first remembered visit to Fordingbridge Fair. A funfair visited Fordingbridge every year during the first week in September. It was situated in Church Square and in the land ...Read more
A memory of Fordingbridge in 1955 by
The Ranks
Remember The Ranks very well. Lots of my friends lived there. Tony Howells, Ian Davies(Pooky), Tony Randall, Spikey Iles, Jock Ilse and their sisters. I remember the Davey family and many others. Most vivid memory is running the streets of ...Read more
A memory of Abercarn in 1959 by
Paper Kids
Hello John, I was one of your dad's paper boys. I can't remember what year as I also delivered for Billy Evans, Stuart and Linda's dad. Just down the road in our village, if you remember not only that, but I delivered for Chaplins on ...Read more
A memory of Walsall Wood by
Mitchell Street
I was born in Mitchell Street in 1952 we were a big family; 7 brothers and 2 sisters and things were very hard but everyone got along well with each other. I remember visiting my auntie Nan in the slap up top floor Henderson St ...Read more
A memory of Coatbridge in 1952 by
The Good Times
I lived at 2 Church Street, Cheadle, opposite the cemetary. My maiden name was Clarke; we lived there until 1948 and then moved to Oak Road. I went to Broadway School from 1946 to 1950 and am looking to see if anyone has ...Read more
A memory of Cheadle by
Hounslow In The 1950's And 1960's
I am Rosemary Harris (now Davies) and I was born in Livingstone Road in 1943 and was christened at St Stephen’s Church. I attended Hounslow Town Infants and Juniors and then Bulstrode Girls School from 1955-1960, ...Read more
A memory of Hounslow by
Captions
5,435 captions found. Showing results 5,161 to 5,184.
Market Square is the open area in front of the Town Hall, and Market Street runs to the left. The locals liked the large Tuscan portico and its four plain columns.
Trindle Road runs across the centre of the picture, whilst the corner of Hall Street can be seen centre right.
Here we see another view of the street, which was cut in early Victorian times to become a channel of trade and industry. The vista extends to Cromac.
The approach to it, Ann Street, was the second most important thoroughfare; beyond the bridge it took the name Bridge End.
The slate-hung buildings are 11 and 13 High Street, two of the oldest in town.
New streets began to be laid out as the town's population increased with the influx of new workers.
Around Ludlow South Along The River Teme Tenbury Wells, Teme Street 1898 Known in the past only as Tenbury, the Wells in its name was added in the late 19th century as a deliberate marketing
Bath Lane off East Street, originally called Bathing House Lane, is so named because it used to lead down to a bathing house that was located by the side of the creek.
Interestingly, the four columns seen in our picture were taken to Knutsford to await use in another building, and that is where they are today - behind the King's Coffee House in King Street, Knutsford
The picture is eastwards from the Square into Bridge Street (left), where Obadiah Bird was the grocer.
Parallel to Stratford Road and to the south of it is one of the grid of streets that were laid out for the town from the 1840s, starting at the east and then expanding westward as land was released
The camera looks east down the High Street, which opens onto Church Gate and Derby Road. Kegworth's origins lay in its medieval weekly market and annual fair.
This fine pink granite church, mainly of the 15th century, is well sited at the head of Church Street. Its solid clasping buttressed and battlemented tower rises in four stages.
On the far left is the Regent Street Primitive Methodist church; it had been built here in 1876 to replace two former chapels on the same site of 1849 and 1863.
Both clocks have been taken away from this busy shopping street, but Milletts Army and Navy Store (right) is still there.
The shoes were made just round the corner in Market Street until the 1930s.
The drama began with proposals for a relief road that would take traffic away from the High Street to make it a more inviting shopping environment.
However, by 1881 traders were complaining that Commercial Street was in a disgusting state. It was not improved until 1903, when wooden blocks were used on the roads to keep the noise down.
The leafy High Street rises away from the village to become the main road to Ashby-de-la-Zouch.
The Town Hall, standing in the middle of the High Street, was given by Lawrence Hyde, first Earl of Rochester, in 1700. Restored in 1889, it was presented to the town by Lady Meux in 1906.
Another quiet day in the High Street; perhaps the photograph was taken on a Wednesday, which was early closing day.
On St Matthew Street opposite once lay Gilbert's Rugby Football Museum, where rugby balls had been made by hand since the first half of the 19th century.
The slate-hung buildings are 11 and 13 High Street, two of the oldest in town.
The slate-hung buildings are 11 and 13 High Street, two of the oldest in town.
Places (385)
Photos (24920)
Memories (6666)
Books (3)
Maps (1622)

