Maps

5,497 maps found.

1897-1898, Ferndale Ref. RNC704557
1897-1898, Greet Ref. RNC721999
1898-1899, Ham Ref. RNC725891
1897-1898, Eccles Ref. RNC698992
1897-1898, Crossways Ref. RNC684678
1897-1898, Cobham Ref. RNC672763
1897-1898, Ashurst Ref. RNC627939
1897-1898, Kingswood Ref. RNC748296
1898-1899, Horton Ref. RNC740860
1947, Ware Ref. NPO860690
1895, Addington Ref. RNE619834
1947, Seaton Ref. NPO827225
1940, Stanhope Ref. NPO838298
1946, Stone Ref. NPO840222
1940, Tong Ref. NPO849903
1946, Tunstall Ref. NPO854329
1946, Woodstock Ref. NPO874089
1895, Ditton Ref. RNE691205
1895, Dunkirk Ref. RNE695535
1896, Crossways Ref. RNE684678

Books

28 books found. Showing results 49 to 72.

Memories

568 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.

I Stayed At St Briavels Castle Youth Hostel

In the early 1970's I was a Scout Leader in Riverhead - near Sevenoaks in Kent - and we decided to spend our 1974 summer camp in the West Country or South Wales. I remember my fellow leader, Squadron ...Read more

A memory of St Briavels in 1974 by John Howard Norfolk

Growing Up In Battersea

I have very happy memories growing up in Battersea. My very special memories are of me and my friends Jackie Heath and Geoffrey Marshall going to Battersea Park and going into what was called the Jungle back then. We would ...Read more

A memory of Battersea in 1973 by April Gagg

Trefriw 1973 78

We moved from Southampton to Trefriw on 5th November 1973. Mum & Dad bought the house 'Llys Llewelyn' opposite the village hall, Mrs Williams' Hair Salon (Harold Gas' wife) and the dreaded entrance to the coal yard. They stripped ...Read more

A memory of Trefriw in 1973 by Andy Philpott

Looking For Old Friends

I was born Silloth but moved away when I was around seven years old. My mother was Jennifer Mcmillan, my grandparents were Edna and Sam McMillan he was a local policeman and also worked at Cars flour mill. The people I ...Read more

A memory of Silloth in 1972 by Malcolm Peter Mcmillan/Haken

Happy Days

Our second son, Sam, was born very shortly after we moved to Thrussington from Kent in 1972. We'll never forget the kindness and support shown to us by people in the village where we had only been for three weeks. The following five ...Read more

A memory of Thrussington in 1972 by Martin Johnson

Beautiful Beaches

My parents lived in Ennors Road in Newquay during the early 70s. They were an RAF family. I was newly-married & lived in Kent, but I used to love visiting them & spending holidays in beautiful Newquay. My new husband used ...Read more

A memory of Newquay in 1972 by Margaret Geoge

6 Foot Of Snow

I can remember when the snow on the roofs of the houses in Boosbeck, when it started to melt it would fall with a load thud lol. I used to love playing up Boosbeck Woods with my mates, Paul Bullock, Cliff Wood and Desmond Wood. We ...Read more

A memory of Boosbeck in 1971 by Roy Hood

Going Down The Village As A Four Year Old

I was born in Lower Sunbury, I'm the youngest of the White family, 1 of 7 kids. I can remember my mum and her friend walking with me down the village, I was in my pushchair, we would walk past the Vienna ...Read more

A memory of Sunbury in 1970 by Michael White

Highfield House Cottage Earlsheaton

The best of my childhood memories are of Highfield House and Highfield Cottage in the late part of the 60s and early 70s. The summers always seemed hot and the days were long and happy. I come from a large ...Read more

A memory of Earlsheaton in 1970 by Maggie Benham

Battersea In The 60's And 70's

Hello, My family originated from east London (mainly Dagenham), but our branch 'emigrated to Battersea in 1964. Our first address was 22 Morella Road, right opposite Wandsworth common. I went to Honeywell junior ...Read more

A memory of Battersea in 1970 by Bob Robson

Captions

216 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.

Caption For Goudhurst, Measuring The Hops 1904

Kent is synonymous with the growing of hops.

Caption For Ashford, Lower High Street C1965

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

Caption For Biddenden, The Village 1901

This is one of the numerous 'dens', or forest clearings, in this part of Kent.

Caption For Kendal, Looking North 1896

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.

Caption For Goudhurst, Measuring The Hops 1904

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.

Caption For Hythe, Cricket Ground 1899

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

Caption For Smarden, The Street C1955

It is known as 'the barn of Kent' because of the width of its aisleless nave and the timber scissor-beam roof.

Caption For Aylesford, Kits Coty House 1898

To the west of the A229 is Kent's most famous Neolithic burial chamber.

Caption For Kents Bank, From Kirkhead 1894

The routes across the sands from Hest Bank and Arnside come here to Kents Bank.

Caption For Milford On Sea, All Saints Church C1955

In the churchyard lies the eminent Victorian biologist William Saville Kent, who died in 1908, his grave covered with an array of fossilised sponges.

Caption For Cranbrook, St David's Bridge 1921

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.

Caption For Flookburgh, The Village 1897

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.

Caption For Cliffe, Church Street C1955

Note the weatherboarded houses, so typical of Kent.

Caption For Selling, Oast Houses C1955

It summons up the essence of the old county of Kent with its hop gardens and orchards.

Caption For Bethersden, Forge Hill C1955

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

Caption For Sidmouth, Church Chapel, Interior 1928

The west window was given by Queen Victoria in memory of her father the Duke of Kent, who died in Sidmouth in 1820.

Caption For Maidstone, High Street C1870

The county town of Kent stands on the banks of the River Medway.

Caption For Leeds Castle, 1892

The county town of Kent stands on the banks of the River Medway.

Caption For Ash, Moat Farm And Oast Houses C1955

Who can fault this lovely view of typical rural Kent?

Caption For Aylesford, The Bridge C1960

The George Hotel, right, and the tobacconist and the teashop pictured nearby shared the village with Kent's smallest pub, the Little Gem.

Caption For Ashford, The Parish Church C1965

Said to be one of the finest town churches in Kent, the parish church is built of Kentish ragstone and has an impressive interior.

Caption For Dormansland, The Schools 1910

The county runs out here: the roads from Dormansland lead a short way to the border with either Kent or Sussex.

Caption For Maidstone, High Street 1898

It teems with traffic, and it is the County Town of Kent. A

Caption For Kendal, Stramongate Bridge 1891

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.