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Maps
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163 books found. Showing results 6,697 to 6,720.
Memories
22,900 memories found. Showing results 2,791 to 2,800.
Gate Burton Hall
I was born at Gate Burton Hall in April 1941. My mother was evacuated from North London. Went back a few years ago and took some photos, but has now been turned into flats and was unable to go inside. My mother had memories of a grand chandelier that was covered in sacking in the main hall.
A memory of Gate Burton in 1941 by
Rising Sun / Usa Family Decendents
My memory is from my father Douglas Willcocks, he would speek of his grandfather in Gunnislake. He said, that he owned a pub called the Rising Sun. I am trying to locate relatives that might have info. His ...Read more
A memory of Burraton in 1940 by
Peckham Grove Peckham
My name is Wendy and I was born in Camberwell in 1961 and we lived at 9 Peckham Grove, Peckham. My brother was born there in 1964. My parents were Lin and Ron Clackson. We immigrated to Australia in 1968 as 10 pound poms.
A memory of Peckham in 1961 by
Abergarw Estate (The Hostels)
My name is Gareth Davis, brother of Yvonne Davis, and son of Harry & Gwen Davis, originally of 35, Heol yr Ynis, Abergarw Estate, commonly known as "The Hostels". I remember my big sister Yvonne walking me over this ...Read more
A memory of Abergarw in 1954 by
Oops I Forgot!!
Though the picture is dated c1965, looking up Windsor Street on the left hand side either 3 or 4 shops up was my uncles 'glass and glazing shop' - his name was David Munn. Some years later he moved the shop to the shopping parade at the top of Long Lane, Hillingdon.
A memory of Uxbridge in 1968 by
You Are Codding
A memory and what a memory it was! There were eleven of us lads who had booked a fishing trip on one of the boats that went out from the harbour in Berwick. It was early in the day when we went out for a five hour trip; ...Read more
A memory of Berwick-upon-Tweed in 2000 by
Astwood Bank Co Op......Remember It?
It was so interesting to find a few photos of old Astwood Bank on here. I moved to the village when my mother married my step father, Jesse Bradley, in 1964. We lived at 21 High Street and I got a job at the ...Read more
A memory of Astwood Bank in 1969 by
Shoemaker Well Street Ruthin
Anybody have any information on my third great grandfather and grandmother Thomas Davies born in Llanbedr abt 1832 and Mary Davies born abt 1837 in Upton, Liverpool He was a shoemaker in Well Street, Ruthin. They had a son ...Read more
A memory of Ruthin in 1860 by
Princess Alice Home And Orphanage 1941 1955
I too, was in Copley House with my sister Sheila. Our surname was Youngs (the sister in charge of the house was Sister Ada Fitzjohn). I was at first, in the nursery school on Chester Road until I ...Read more
A memory of Sutton Coldfield in 1941 by
Davenhill School
I used to live in Aintree Lane, by St Giles's Church in the only council houses. I'm one of twelve children - the Ferrie's, and everyone knew at least one of us. I remember playing in Aintree race course, skating around the old ...Read more
A memory of Old Roan Sta in 1959
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 6,697 to 6,720.
Facing us in the distance is Barnett's the fishmonger's, a local business in the Market Place of long standing - it closed in 2000.
The tower of the parish church was rebuilt in 1709.
The village of Wyke Regis, now a suburb of Weymouth, north from Chamberlaine Road (foreground).
The lighthouse was built by Trinity House in 1844; the occulting light at the top of its 50ft tower could be seen up to 16 miles out to sea.
It was formed as a hollow in the ground filled with melted ice at the end of the Ice Age. There were many such hollows, but most of them have long since dried out.
The beautiful white gates pictured here are not the ones that give this village its name - the name probably arose from much older gates at the nearby Vale Royal Abbey, once the largest Cistercian abbey
A busy late morning scene in Colchester's High Street at the turn of the century.The Town Hall, which dominates this view, was not completed until 1902.The High Street lies along the central axis
An unusual view of the Abbey Gateway—in the centre—and the bridge over the Cornmill Stream, a tributary of the River Lea, with people relaxing around the broken walls.
This church has the most impressive chantry in a Wiltshire village church, according to Derek Parker and John Chandler in Wiltshire Churches, an Illustrated History.
Recent archaeological investigations by The National Trust have revealed an arc of at least 15 stones buried in the circle itself.
A boy appears to be sitting for the photographer, perhaps wanting to lead him in to reveal some of the caves' secrets.
Five miles east of Wells in the eastern Mendips, Shepton Mallet was a prosperous wool manufacturing town, which declined when northern England's Industrial Revolution got under way.
Wellington, about ten miles south-west of Taunton at the foot of the Blackdown Hills, is an attractive market town with its focus where South, Fore and High Streets meet.
A typical station approach of late 19th-century houses and the aptly named Railway pub.
Bandstands are, by their very nature, fascinating pieces of municipal equipment.
The Macclesfield Canal passes through the outskirts of Congleton, complete with an elegant iron aqueduct where it crosses Canal Street, and several attractive bridges.
Both the Rose and Crown (left) and the George (right) public houses thrive, but the corner shop (left, beyond the Rose and Crown), in this photograph Norman the grocer's, has led a chequered life, being at
On the left is a Wealden-type house of c1400; it was restored in 1974-76.
This view of the 1935 Silver Jubilee seat is taken from outside the King's Head on the A12, looking down the High Street.
This hotel was probably first built at the end of the 18th century, when the Turnpike Trusts began to improve the county's roads.
The No 14 bus chugs up Dee View Road from Heswall Village, passing the Dee View Inn on the right, which stands on the junctions of Dee View Road, The Mount and Dawstone Road.
St Illtyd's is built in the Decorated style and dates from the early 14th century; the nave was rebuilt and a north aisle added in 1849 at a cost of £1,200.
The post office at Ayot was used by George Bernard Shaw in a rather lesser known play, 'A Village Wooing'.
Randell House was previously called All Saints' Home; it housed young homeless children from London slums until 1937, when it became a house of rest and prayer for ladies.
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