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Places
30 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Trerice Manor, Cornwall
- Iford Manor, Wiltshire
- Manor Royal, Sussex
- Manor, The, Sussex
- Manor Estate, Yorkshire
- Cliton Manor, Bedfordshire
- Manor Bourne, Devon
- Manor Park, Berkshire
- Manor Park, Sussex
- Manor Parsley, Cornwall
- Owton Manor, Cleveland
- Sutton Manor, Merseyside
- Manor Park, Nottinghamshire
- Burton Manor, Staffordshire
- Uphill Manor, Avon
- Reen Manor, Cornwall
- Hood Manor, Cheshire
- Manor Park, Buckinghamshire
- Walton Manor, Oxfordshire
- Weston Manor, Isle of Wight
- Landguard Manor, Isle of Wight
- Wightwick Manor, West Midlands
- Ruislip Manor, Greater London
- Manor House, West Midlands
- Manor Powis, Central Scotland
- Manor Park, Greater London
- Manor Hill Corner, Lincolnshire
- Manor Park, Yorkshire (near Sheffield)
- Manor Park, Cheshire (near Middlewich)
- Manor Park, Yorkshire (near Ilkley)
Photos
1,165 photos found. Showing results 541 to 560.
Maps
175 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 649 to 1.
Memories
726 memories found. Showing results 271 to 280.
Wilbrighton Hall, Staffordshire
I have written about my family in a series of books called the Douglas Trilogy; www.mytruthliesintheruins.com I visited Wilbrighton Hall about 15 years ago and took many pictures that I would gladly share. Acquired in ...Read more
A memory of Newburn by
Northolt Wonderland
I was born in Barnet in 1942, but the Germans bombed our house and killed my dad a few months later. I was sent to Wales to avoid the Blitz. (BlitzKrieg - Lightening strikes) after 5 years I found myself in Millway Gardens in ...Read more
A memory of Northolt by
I Was Born In Chippinghurst Manor. On The 15th July 1942..
Due to the fact that my mother was in Oxford, to escape the bombing in London while she was pregnant, during the second world war, she gave birth to me in Chippinghurst Manor on 15th July 1942. ROBERT NEIL CRAWFORD.
A memory of Chippinghurst Manor by
The Fair
Christmas and birthdays were an under-whelming time of year in our household. However, Eastertime, coincided with the arrival of Stanley Thurston's fair (and a big dollop of rain). l lived opposite Manor Rd Park (or reck) from 1956-64, and along ...Read more
A memory of Luton
141st Hb Rga
I'm not from East Ham but my Grandad served with the 141st HB which was formed in East Ham in 1915, they billeted in local schools. Any ideas of local names of schools? I think they used Clockhouse and Manor Farms, he used to mention a place ...Read more
A memory of East Ham by
Hamilton Secondary & Cole Street Infant School
It used to be in a nunnery in Birkenhead just off manor hill nr entrance to the park ..it was called Nazareth house ? I went to Hamilton middle school in the juniors ? I was 8/9 at the time ?? A few kids I ...Read more
A memory of Birkenhead by
Southall Memories
My parents, who came to England from India in 1955, when I was 3 months old, moved to Southall in 1959, from Whitton, when I was 4. I remember Southall Broadway at that time-there was actually a saddlery business there! C. Quinion, ...Read more
A memory of Southall by
Leaving A Mark On The Landscape
It was 1966 myself and 2 colleagues were bouncing across the downs in a Landrover when I first saw Imber. What a beautiful little village nestled in the bottom of the valley. It's red brick manor house next to the church and ...Read more
A memory of Imber by
1940 To 1956 Clarence Road
I was born at 25 Clarence road 1940 and lived there to 1956 as a boy worked on milk round with Albert on 3 whealed cart delivering to percey rd clarence rd manor road buildings also in Bobs dairy shop and Jack Feacey ...Read more
A memory of Canning Town by
Memories
I go and see an old lady each week and she has just written her life story, Veronika Davis she was Veronika Lengyel, in her life story she went to the Chew Magna, Manor House, Sacred Heart High School, she was there from 1949 until 1951, she ...Read more
A memory of Chew Magna by
Captions
689 captions found. Showing results 649 to 672.
The first was in the Market Place, near St Anne's Square, built in 1729 at the expense of Sir Oswald Mosley, Lord of the Manor. It was taken down in 1793, and a new Exchange was started in 1806.
Downham is another example of a village which was tightly controlled by the lords of the manor, who refused to let industry into the village.
Burghurst manor house is opposite the church. Rampydene is a fine brick house built in 1699. The church of St Bartholomew is on the left of the picture, partly hidden by Scots Pine trees.
The square classical building with a pediment is Monkton Hill Wesleyan church, which stands on the site of the Black Horse (this inn is documented in 1750; it was built on land belonging to Monkton Manor
Canford House is Poole's manor house, which dates from 1450. In the early 19th century this was the home of William Ponsonby, brother of Byron's lover Lady Caroline Lamb.
Canford House is Poole's manor house, which dates from 1450. In the early 19th century this was the home of William Ponsonby, brother of Byron's lover Lady Caroline Lamb.
Industrialist Sir James Reckitt bought the manor in 1884 (it was demolished in 1932); being a Quaker, he refused to allow a pub in the village.
Sir Roger Fiennes' ancestor, Sir John, had married the heiress Maud de Monceux in 1320, the last of the family that had held the manor since the 12th century and had given the village the second
The village was built around the Manor House, later surrendered to Henry VIII after the dissolution. It was sold in 1591and later bought by the Liverpool sugar trader, Richard Watt, in 1783.
The castle was built by the new Norman lord of the manor of Halton, Nigel Fitzwilliam, in around 1071.
The Beaumont Arms, named after the lord of the manor, was originally a gaol and courthouse in the 14th century. The original cells with stone beds are still in the basement.
In fact, the castle is a fortified manor house, carefully set out within a rectangular moat, and the beauty of the remains, which are in the guardianship of English Heritage, resides not so much
On the right is Manor Farm, now a residence and bed and breakfast.
On her death, Isabella, queen of Edward II, succeeded to the Manor. In 1337 Edward III gave the castle to his son Edward, the Black Prince, as part of the newly created Duchy of Cornwall.
In 1580 Elizabeth had leased Carey the Manor of Berkhamsted, which included the ruined castle and the deer park, at the nominal rent of one red rose.
In the Civil War, Sir Gilbert, the Lord of the Manor, was for the King, yet his son and heir Richard fought for the Roundheads. The house was never fortified, so it escaped destruction by Cromwell.
After the Norman Conquest, the manor was held by Peter de Valoignes, and it was from him that the church took its dedication.
Clovelly's remarkable state of preservation is due to the philanthropic nature of the Hamlyn family, who acquired the manor in 1740.
The royal connections with this park probably go back further that with other parks, beginning with Edward I (1272-1307), when the area was part of the Manor of Shene; the name was changed to Richmond
The Toby Jug, Fudge Kitchen and Mulberry Manor front the next pavement, in a row of shops uphill to the Three Cups Hotel.
This splendid setting shows off St Mary's alongside Chieveley Manor House, which is of red brick with a hipped roof.
It was Alexander, Bishop of Lincoln and lord of the manor, who replaced the original Norman timber fortress with one of stone, employing Ranulph of Durham to build the gatehouse; Newark thus became one
Headstone Manor itself is sited within a square moat to the east of the barn, and dates from the mid 14th century. It is without doubt one of the most important timber-framed halls in Greater London.
This was Chillington Manor House, a former home of the Wyatts. It is a splendid red brick 16th-century house with magnificent Tudor chimneys and an early Tudor long gallery.
Places (30)
Photos (1165)
Memories (726)
Books (1)
Maps (175)

