Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Places
35 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Wood End, Berkshire
- Wood End, Hertfordshire
- Woods End, Greater Manchester
- Woodend, Essex
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Keswick)
- Woodend, Cheshire (near New Mills)
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Egremont)
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Boot)
- Wood End, West Midlands (near Coventry)
- Wood End, Greater Manchester (near Chadderton)
- Wood End, West Midlands (near Wednesfield)
- Wood End, Hereford & Worcester
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Nuneaton)
- Wood End, Buckinghamshire (near Mursley)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Kempston)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Bedford)
- Wood End, Greater Manchester (near Mossley)
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Tamworth)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Kimbolton)
- Wood End, Buckinghamshire (near Mursley)
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Redditch)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Ampthill)
- Woodend, Staffordshire
- Woodend, Fife (near Lochgelly)
- Woodend, Lothian (near Queensferry)
- Woodend, Northamptonshire
- Woodend Green, Essex
- Wood End Green, Greater London
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Arlecdon)
- Woodend, Nottinghamshire (near Sutton In Ashfield)
- Lower Woodend, Buckinghamshire
- Upper Woodend, Grampian
- Shenstone Woodend, Staffordshire
- Lower Woodend, Grampian
- Hanbury Woodend, Staffordshire
Photos
6 photos found. Showing results 421 to 6.
Maps
150 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 505 to 4.
Memories
2,335 memories found. Showing results 211 to 220.
Memories Of Swithland
My first memory of Swithland Village goes way back to the days when I was very young. The war was over and we had become accustomed to Holidays at Home instead of going to the sea-side. My parents bought a chalet in what we ...Read more
A memory of Swithland in 1947 by
Days Gone By
My memories of Greyabbey date back to 1940 just after the Blitz when Mum and her 3 sisters plus one sister-in-law with a bunch of kids relocated to Cardy, a small community appox. 3 miles from Greyabbey. I was 8 years of age at the ...Read more
A memory of Greyabbey in 1940 by
I Remeber Hutton Residential School
I was a 'student' at the institution from about 1948 to 1953. I remember some of the staff. Head master was Mr Higdon, Teacher of wood work and house master was Mr McFadon. there was Gov Reily, Mr & ...Read more
A memory of Shenfield in 1953 by
Summer Trips To Martin"S
My sister Pauline and I used to come here with our mother, and sometimes father, on hot summer days, around 1948 to 1952 (age 6 to 10). We commuted three stops from Reading South in electric trains. I basically learned the ...Read more
A memory of Wokingham in 1950 by
Where I Was Born
My Beginning, at Sole Street near Cobham Kent. (9th March 1946 - 2nd January 1951) I was born on Saturday March 9th 1946 at 3.29pm at Temperley, The Street, Sole Street, Kent. I was delivered at home by the ...Read more
A memory of Sole Street in 1946
School Days
I remember moving from a one up one down back to back house in Hunslet at the age of approx 4 years to a brand new council house in Newhall Road, Belle Isle. I had a great time, my father borrowed a pony and trap, and we went back to ...Read more
A memory of Belle Isle by
Old Times Gone By
That looks a little like my dad's old car. I have happy memories of Epping. I was born there over 50 years ago in Ivy Chimneys and remember walking across the roads in town with my dad hand in hand, and after school going up in the ...Read more
A memory of Epping in 1960 by
Walk About
Now living in Australia - Arriving back to visit relatives, a previous life time of my walk about ways seems so dream-like. Living at The Greig Farm above the Wier Farm (The Wier which had been in my family forever) was the best ...Read more
A memory of Ewyas Harold in 1965 by
Thanks For The Memories
My goodness this brings back memories! I grew up in Irby and we lived in Oaklea Road from the late 40’s to the late 60’s – I’m now a true blue Aussie having lived in Queensland since the mid 70’s but about to revisit Irby in ...Read more
A memory of Irby by
Bramley In The Years 1935 To 1941
Now 80 years of age I used to live with my Mum and Dad and brother Michael in Lincroft Crescent just above the Sandford estate. The houses were new and rather small though we were so happy there ...Read more
A memory of Bramley in 1930 by
Captions
583 captions found. Showing results 505 to 528.
The Westgate Centre, the Eastgate Shopping Centre, and the high street shops in East Walk, Southernhay, and the Town Square give a comprehensive shopping experience, and of course there is the
The village, seen from Okeford Hill with Piddles Wood beyond (left), was estate-owned until April 1966, when it was auctioned by Sturminster Newton estate agent Arthur Richards.
The awful height of the fissure which the bridge bestrides a hundred feet above the observer, rendered doubly gloomy by its narrowness, and the wood which overhangs it; the stunning noise of the torrent
It has a Norman flint-built round tower, and a shingled octagonal spire. It is one of the three Norman round towers of Sussex.
This is a village in two halves, High Town and Low Town, a quarter mile apart. Land around here was once one of the royal hunting grounds. The White Horse, a chalk hill figure, was carved in 1857.
Before the birth of theme parks, a day out in the late 1950s (when comparatively few people owned a car) was by Midland Red bus to Groby Pool, Swithland Woods and Bradgate Park, with the
Beyond the thick wooded cover, the more open land of the deer park is corrugated by the medieval ridge and furrow of open field cultivation.
Across the chalk ridge, the route returns to the greensand country, and to one of Surrey's prettiest and most wooded areas.
Cookham will forever be associated with the artist Stanley Spencer who was born in Cookham in 1891 and died in 1959.
The church has a Tudor doorway and a Norman piscina on a carved pillar. Thomas Turner, who lived in the village in the mid-18th century, left an important diary spanning eleven years of his life.
Heysham Tower was built by T J Knowles in about 1837, and it was the home of the Cawthra family.
Beyond the thick wooded cover, the more open land of the deer park is corrugated by the medieval ridge and furrow of open field cultivation.
Henry de Newburgh built a large wooden motte and bailey on the site of the present castle; before his death in 1123 he might well have begun to replace the wood with stone.
This village is noted for its beautiful woods, a railway tunnel under the Balcombe Forest and a brick viaduct over the Ouse valley. The church of St Mary was built in 1847.
The castellated entrance to Townley Hall, on the A671 Todmorden Road at Burnley Wood, was photographed when it was still a private estate.
The awful height of the fissure which the bridge bestrides a hundred feet above the observer, rendered doubly gloomy by its narrowness, and the wood which overhangs it; the stunning noise of the torrent
Though a good picture of a much-missed local landmark, this photograph also gives us a hint of Burnley as an industrial town.
This popular seaside resort sits in a wide sweep of bay on the north coast, with wooded hills behind the promenade, which fronts miles of safe sandy beach.
In this picture we can see the small stream that runs down from Waddington Fell and the Moorcock Inn as it runs right through the centre of the village to join the Ribble.
Stone vaulting in the nave has been replaced with wood. The large impressive Perpendicular church has a four-stage powerful tower; the steeple gave the church an overall height of 186ft.
Heysham Tower was built by T J Knowles in about 1837, and it was the home of the Cawthra family.
In this picture we can see the small stream that runs down from Waddington Fell and the Moorcock Inn as it runs right through the centre of the village to join the Ribble.
Almost certainly a race or regatta is in progress, as the distinctive boats of the Royal Windermere Yacht Club pose gracefully against the wooded shoreline.
Immortalised by Laurie Lee in his autobiography 'Cider With Rosie', Slad and its wooded valley is known throughout the world by millions of readers who have never been there.
Places (35)
Photos (6)
Memories (2335)
Books (4)
Maps (150)

