Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Folkestone, Kent
- Canterbury, Kent
- Rochester, Kent
- Broadstairs, Kent
- Hythe, Kent
- Dover, Kent
- Tenterden, Kent
- Ashford, Kent
- Chatham, Kent
- Maidstone, Kent
- Gravesend, Kent
- Tunbridge Wells, Kent
- Margate, Kent
- Tonbridge, Kent
- Deal, Kent
- Sevenoaks, Kent
- Ramsgate, Kent
- Sandwich, Kent
- Faversham, Kent
- Sheerness, Kent
- Gillingham, Kent
- Herne Bay, Kent
- Sittingbourne, Kent
- Whitstable, Kent
- Swanley, Kent
- Northfleet, Kent
- Lydd, Kent
- Shepherdswell, Kent
- New Romney, Kent
- Sibertswold, Kent
- Swanscombe, Kent
- Kents Bank, Cumbria
- Cobham, Kent
- Goudhurst, Kent
- Cranbrook, Kent
- Kingsdown, Kent (near Deal)
Photos
9,752 photos found. Showing results 41 to 60.
Maps
5,497 maps found.
Books
28 books found. Showing results 49 to 72.
Memories
571 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Ilderton Road
I became a Bermondsey boy after moving from a prefab where I was born in the big snow in 1947. We lived at 14 Caulfield Road, Peckham, just around the corner from Jordans Dairy in Lugard Road s.e.15. (The last dairy farm in London). I ...Read more
A memory of Bermondsey by
Summer Term 1951
When I was 12 and visiting my grandparents in Edenbridge, Kent, my parents decided I needed a taste of English boarding school life. As an American, so soon after WWII, several things struck me. I was much healthier and stronger ...Read more
A memory of Frilsham by
Queen Elizabeth Ii Coronation Day 2.6.1953 In Blackfen
My Mum, Dad and I watched the coronation on our 9“ TV. Mum had made crisps. In the afternoon a children‘s coronation party was held in the George‘s garage (Raeburn Road) because of the ...Read more
A memory of Blackfen by
Marriage Between Ivy Alice Gillard To Robert Alexander Bent
This date Oct 6th, in 1945, while serving in the RCAF, I was married to Ivy Gillard in this olden church. It was a bright sunny day. Ivy came to Canada with our daughter Barbara in October of ...Read more
A memory of Paignton in 1945 by
Hop Picking
Paddock Wood, in particular Beltring, the home of the famous Whitebread Oasts, was the centre of the Hop Gardens of Kent. The Gardens were set out with rows of elevated wire tressles which were supported at intervals by poles. In the ...Read more
A memory of Paddock Wood in 1940 by
The Meadow, Chislehurst.
We lived in The Meadow, the road opposite Rush Pond, for 30years. Our house is not there anymore, it was demolished and a much bigger house on the site. We had a dear little cottage, St Anne's. I still belong to the ...Read more
A memory of Chislehurst by
My Memories Of Resolven.
The personal views of Resolven expressed in these pages reflect my own fond memories of Resolven, the Vale of Neath and its people. In 1953 I returned to the valley as a teenager, little did I know it was to become my home. I worked ...Read more
A memory of Resolven by
Seaford Rd In The 50s And 60s
I was born in 15 Seaford rd. in 1954. Tottenham then was like a village where everyone knew everyone else. I can clearly remember rag and bone men with their horse and carts, ringing their bells yelling "old rags and ...Read more
A memory of Tottenham by
Astrall Hall
We holidayed in Torquay in july 1965 we was a group of kids from The Hollies children's home in sidcup Kent..by what I remember the YMCA hotel was called the castle hotel..would this be the same one or was there more then one YMCA hotels in Torquay in those days
A memory of Torquay by
Church Path, Mitcham And The People That Lived There
I was born in Collierswood Maternity Home, a very short time before it was bombed during the Second World War. The year was 1944. My family being homeless were housed in requisitioned properties in Mitcham. ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham in 1944 by
Captions
216 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
Eastry was home to many miners who worked down the east Kent pits.
The broad expanse of what had been Ashford's original market place and a rendezvous for Kent's sheep and cattle farmers had, by the mid 1950s, been bisected by a central traffic reservation and new road
This is one of the numerous 'dens', or forest clearings, in this part of Kent.
In many villages in Kent are the great gardens and oast-houses devoted to the growing and processing of the hop, which gives beer its taste.
Surrounded by these majestic trees, and with the west tower of St Leonard's Church, one of the largest and finest in Kent, rising behind them, a summer game of cricket takes place on this spacious ground
It is known as 'the barn of Kent' because of the width of its aisleless nave and the timber scissor-beam roof.
To the west of the A229 is Kent's most famous Neolithic burial chamber.
The routes across the sands from Hest Bank and Arnside come here to Kents Bank.
The town of Kendal was founded on the west bank of the River Kent, although the earliest settlement around the castle was on the east bank.
The summer of this year is on record as being suffocatingly hot, and this village, like most in Kent, suffered from a completely rainless June and July.
Flookburgh, a charming and ancient market town between the Kent Estuary and Cartmel Sands, takes its name from Floki, the name of a Norse settler.
Note the weatherboarded houses, so typical of Kent.
In the churchyard lies the eminent Victorian biologist William Saville Kent, who died in 1908, his grave covered with an array of fossilised sponges.
It summons up the essence of the old county of Kent with its hop gardens and orchards.
A typical village of the Kent Weald, with its weatherboarded cottages clustered round its green, Bethersden was once famous for its paludrina marble extracted from the local clay and consisting of the
Said to be one of the finest town churches in Kent, the parish church is built of Kentish ragstone and has an impressive interior.
The county runs out here: the roads from Dormansland lead a short way to the border with either Kent or Sussex.
It teems with traffic, and it is the County Town of Kent. A
Stramongate Bridge was also known as Miller or Mill Bridge, because it linked the mills on the eastern bank of the River Kent to the 'Auld Grey Town' on the other bank.
The west window was given by Queen Victoria in memory of her father the Duke of Kent, who died in Sidmouth in 1820.
The county town of Kent stands on the banks of the River Medway.
The county town of Kent stands on the banks of the River Medway.
Who can fault this lovely view of typical rural Kent?
The George Hotel, right, and the tobacconist and the teashop pictured nearby shared the village with Kent's smallest pub, the Little Gem.
Places (1279)
Photos (9752)
Memories (571)
Books (28)
Maps (5497)