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
2 places found.
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Photos
91 photos found. Showing results 41 to 60.
Maps
34 maps found.
Books
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Memories
1,211 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
My Grandfather
I was born in 1953 and my Grandfather was already dead. His name was William Bowe and he was the last mill keeper at Hall Mill, although his son John, my uncle, ran a joinery business for a few years from there. Billy Bowe was the ...Read more
A memory of Workington in 1953 by
Windsor Road
We moved to Bromley Cross about 1947 just before my sister Virginia was born, it was a lovely new prefab, but I don't remember much about the inside of it apart from the wood-burning stove, that sticks in my mind for some ...Read more
A memory of Bromley Cross in 1947 by
Mixed Feelings
I first arrived in Llanegryn at the latter end of 1939 along with my younger sister and a lot of other kids from my school (St Johns)in Birkenhead. I was eight years old at the time and my sister was six. We were all put into the ...Read more
A memory of Llanegryn in 1930 by
Even Better Today
I still visit this church, although it is locked much of the time. It looks even better today than it did way back then. The village of 'Send' was supposed to have been built around this church (I am told), however it ended up a ...Read more
A memory of Send by
Where I Grew Up
I lived most of my life in Sible Hedingham, as a family we moved there from London in 1962. I was just 2 years old at the time. My father Robert Farren, "Bob" as he was best known and my mother Ivy, took over the licence of ...Read more
A memory of Sible Hedingham in 1962 by
My Great Great Grandparents Had This Pub In 1871
my great great grandparents mary&william street had this pub in the 1800's and my grandmother says she used to have to get up at 5 a.m. to go and clean for (grandmother and she'd better ...Read more
A memory of Warnham Court School in 1870 by
Taylors On Port Hill
This is where my father (1924) and grandfather (1896) were born, their cottages were just round the corner slightly further up the hill, Gt Grandfather (1844) rented 2 cottages for his family of himself, his wife and 9 children, ...Read more
A memory of Hertford in 1920 by
The Nag''s Head
One didn't have to travel to London in the past to watch pro bands plying their trade. The Nag's Head public house was a much attended venue during the late 1960s and early 1970s for watching many of the (what was then known as) ...Read more
A memory of Wollaston in 1969 by
The Palace Cinema
The pub on the left of the picture was renowned for a few brawls in it's time, originally called The Globe (now known as Raferty's) I recall walking down Cambridge St and seeing a man being hurled through the window into the ...Read more
A memory of Wellingborough in 1968 by
History Of Clayton Family 1700s
Descendants of George Clayton Generation No. 1 1. GEORGE1 CLAYTON was born 1788 in Pickhill, West Roxby, Yorkshire England. He married ANN MUDD 08 December 1806 in Pickhill, West Roxby, Yorkshire England. She was ...Read more
A memory of Pickhill in 1860 by
Captions
331 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
Butter Row School, in the foreground, stands detached some distance from the community it served. It closed more than a generation ago. Thrupp clings to the hillside on the left.
Prices by the mid fifties had doubled on what they had been around 1946: a pound of sirloin cost 4s 2d, 3lb of flour 1s 3d, a dozen eggs would set you back 3s 10d and a pound of butter 2s 6d.
Prices by the mid fifties had doubled on what they had been around 1946: a pound of sirloin cost 4s 2d, 3lb of flour 1s 3d, a dozen eggs would set you back 3s 10d and a pound of butter 2s 6d.
The side wall of this corner shop in Hartlepool is being used for the once familiar bill boards advertising Hovis bread, Swan Vesta matches and (a more modern product) Danish Lurpak butter. I
The taller building straight ahead was Manor House Dairy, supplying butter, cheese and eggs. To the left is the hall of the first WI to be established in East Suffolk - it started in September 1918.
The Butter Cross in the centre of Kirkby Malzeard, north west of Ripon, was the traditional venue for the village's famous Sword Dance, now rarely performed.
Meanwhile, shoppers could pop into Longs (left) for unrationed sweets or stand and admire the dexterity of the assistants in the Maypole Dairy next door as they patted a pound of golden butter into shape
The market place is the focal point of the town; the 17th-century Butter Cross offered shelter to the women selling dairy produce. The classical Tuscan columns support a pyramidal stone-slated roof.
The ground floor served as a butter market, hence the name. Upstairs was the Blue Coat Charity School (the name came from the uniforms given to the boys to wear).
The ancient Butter Cross became unsafe and was replaced in 2000 by a wrought iron replica with seating.
In 1914 a pound of butter at the Meadow Dairy Co would have cost 1s 3d; by 1920 the war had pushed the price up to 2s 11d.
P H Fisher's Notes and Recollections of Stroud states that 'to the ground floor of the Market House butter women and dealers in poultry, fruit and vegetables from the country formerly resorted on market
Among its attractions are many fine country houses and cottages built from locally quarried stone that has mellowed to the colour of honey on butter.
The early 16th-century Butter Cross, with its 13 stone piers, was originally built as a shrine; the cupola and clock turret were added in 1683. It no longer functions as a covered market place.
The Market House was built of granite in 1839-40 for the sale of meat, poultry and butter, and the four carved ox heads above the pillars (left) are a notable feature of the street frontage.
Buttermere takes its name from Old English, and means 'the lake by the dairy pastures'—where the butter is made.The farmstead of High Stile is still in the same business a thousand years later.
Two ox heads above granite pillars on the left indicate the Market House entrance, erected in 1840 for meat, poultry and butter.
The building dates from 1738, and at one time the local cheese and butter market was held here.
The lower part was originally open, and was used for the selling of eggs, butter and cheese.
The access to Butter Row Lane has now been improved by the demolition of the rather odd-shaped building on the right. The shop opposite it, then the post office, has also gone.
Besides having good window displays, the shop would place blackboards outside: 'Danish prize dairy butter, Lancashire and Cheddar cheese, noted teas and coffees and unequalled Wiltshire and Danish bacon
The Butter Cross was built in 1689, after the fire of the previous year which destroyed much of the town.
This view was taken standing against the old Butter Cross looking down the St Ives road.
A year after a fire razed most of Bungay to the ground in 1688, the Butter Cross was built to commemorate it.
Places (2)
Photos (91)
Memories (1211)
Books (0)
Maps (34)