Places

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Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Photos

2 photos found. Showing results 441 to 2.

Maps

31 maps found.

Books

2 books found. Showing results 529 to 2.

Memories

638 memories found. Showing results 221 to 230.

Barbridge

I can remember visiting my grandparents at Barbridge as a small child.  In the early 60's my grandparents name was Poole and they lived in the end house nearest to the pub.  Grandad worked for British Waterways and the garden went straight ...Read more

A memory of Barbridge in 1960 by Carole Marsh

Commercial Street

I lived at number 36 from 1936 for 11 yrs. and saw the changes that World War 11 brought to our village. I remember the milkman and his horse-drawn cart and mam asking for a gill as she searched her purse for the coin to pay for ...Read more

A memory of Pontnewydd in 1940 by Lance Ford

Memories Of Lundhill

I remember playing down the hillies on what is now Wombwell Golf Course. This area was once a thriving pit, until in 1857 a large explosion brought death and misery to the area called Lundhill. 189 men and boys were killed. After ...Read more

A memory of Wombwell in 1950 by Cliff Grimshaw

Princes End Bred

I was bought up in Princes End from the age of 6, my brother and parents are still there. It's a bit dilapidated now but was brilliant when I was young. The community was full of families where generations lived just streets away ...Read more

A memory of Princes End by Christine Metcalf

Weston Point I.C.I Recreation Club And Runcorn Town

Memory, Saturday Night Old Time dance upstairs in theI.C.I Club. My father played there on the drums. I was there with a girlfriend and her mother and father and grandmother, the old lady taught me a ...Read more

A memory of Runcorn in 1957 by Robert Welding

Training

I must have been one of the first on the training ship because I thought it was 1954 I was there, but if it is recorded as c1955 who am I to argue! I was there training for the merchant navy for about 12 weeks. I was the camp bugler until ...Read more

A memory of Sharpness in 1955 by Colin Friend

Sandcastles

Here is the sand we called Ferry Hut. I don't know of any hut ever being there so how it got its name is a mystery to me, maybe someone will tell me some day, but sand castles and paddling and big ocean going ships I do remember, they was ...Read more

A memory of Runcorn in 1953 by Clive Bisby

Summers In Blackhall

My Grandma - Bertha Lanaghan - lived in Third Street for over 50 years. She made hookey rugs as big as a room from old blankets, coats, etc whatever she could get, to sell for extra money. She dyed the wool three ...Read more

A memory of Blackhall Colliery by Kathy Ames

The Fox And Hounds

I remember when my first racing bike was bought for me. I bought a survey map of north west Kent and decided that I would go to Eynsford as I had been there many times by bus and now I had independant means and no limit as to ...Read more

A memory of Romney Street in 1956 by Peter Collihole

National Oil Refinery

I started work at the laboratory in the Llandarcy Oil Refinery in 1942 for the great weekly wage of one pound, one shilling and ninepence, when I was 16. Mostly women worked in the lab but once the war was over the company only ...Read more

A memory of Llandarcy in 1942

Captions

756 captions found. Showing results 529 to 552.

Caption For Neath, The Abbey 1893

Set on the banks of the Tennant Canal, the Abbey was founded in 1130 by the Norman baron Richard de Granville. In the 16th century, John Leland described the abbey as 'the fairest in all Wales'.

Caption For Braunston, The Marina C1965

The marina was originally a reservoir to maintain levels in the Grand Union Canal; it was also used as a pound to moor working boats. Water was pumped from here up to the top lock.

Caption For Lockerley, The Green C1955

This is a reference to the Salisbury Canal, an ambitious navigation intended to link the cathedral city with Southampton; however, the scheme was never completed.

Caption For Saltburn By The Sea, The Italian Garden, Valley Gardens C1955

Some fifty years later it was illuminated by lanterns and candles in the evenings, and was described as 'one of the finest pieces of floral artistry in the Kingdom'. Some elements of it still remain.

Caption For Lincoln, Cathedral From Brayford C1950

The Roman Foss Dyke canal fell out of use during Anglo-Saxon times, but was restored after the Norman Conquest to become one of the main outlets for the great medieval city’s wool and lead exports.

Caption For Brookwood, Basingstoke Canal C1955

Note the chain around the bottom gates; these were not completely necessary, as the canal was impassable by this time. It was restored and re-opened in 1991.

Caption For Ellesmere Port, The Shropshire Union Canal C1955

The town owes its very existence to the building of the Ellesmere Canal (as it was then called) by Thomas Telford and William Jessop in the 1790s.

Caption For Market Drayton, The Canal At Tyrley Locks C1955

Along with coal, the main products that were shipped along this canal were cheese and milk.

Caption For Garstang, Church Street C1955

Church Street leads from the Market Square down to the Lancaster Canal, where a basin facilitated the handling of cargo on and off the barges.

Caption For Ulverston, The Square 1895

A market town since the 13th century, Ulverston became a busy port during the 18th and 19th centuries, exporting slate via the country's shortest canal.

Caption For Horncastle, The Bull Ring C1955

An important medieval town, it declined until the early 19th century when the Horncastle Navigation Canal opened, giving access to Lincoln and Boston.

Caption For Stockton Heath, Old London Road C1965

This view towards the Ship Canal shows London Road free of today's endless stream of traffic.

Caption For Cookley, The Recreation Ground C1965

Cookley is a rather over-grown village overlooking the River Stour; since the 1700s, it has also overlooked the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal, which links Stourport and Kidderminster with

Caption For Shatterford, The Main Road C1955

Cookley is a rather over-grown village overlooking the River Stour; since the 1700s, it has also overlooked the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal, which links Stourport and Kidderminster with

Caption For Kidderminster, The Church And Canal 1931

In later years, both the River Stour and the associated canal system were used to transport carpets on the first stage of their journeys to the marketplaces of the world.

Caption For Avoncliff, The Aqueduct C1950

On this section of the Kennet & Avon Canal, the river Avon is crossed twice. This aqueduct at Avoncliffe is the first.

Caption For Bradford On Avon, The Canal C1955

This area below the town's lock has been enormously improved since the Kennet & Avon Canal was re-opened throughout: boats now tie up here.

Caption For Rochdale, Hollingworth Lake 1892

Castleton developed largely because of its proximity to the canal and railway, making it suitable for mill building.

Caption For Exeter, From The Canal 1896

The path extends for the full length of the canal.

Caption For Hungerford, St Lawrence's Parish Church 1903

The church of St Lawrence is right alongside the Kennet & Avon Canal. This view today, a century later, is almost unchanged.

Caption For Salisbury, Silver Street C1955

Virtually every shop in the picture has since either moved elsewhere in the city centre or closed down altogether: Marks and Spencer moved to New Canal, and Woolworths to the High Street.

Caption For Norwich, The Cathedral And Pulls Ferry 1891

It was built on the spot where the specially dug canal for transporting stone for Norwich Cathedral - brought across from Normandy by Bishop Herbert de Losinga - joined the river.

Caption For Runcorn, All Saints Church 1894

The Manchester Ship Canal runs just behind the church. The church, large enough to hold over 1,000 people, was built in the 1840s at a cost of £8,052.

Caption For Salthouse, The Post Office C1960

They not only provided the post office, but also newspapers and the posters outside kept the locals abreast of events both national and local; sweets, chocolates, tinned foods, candles and basic