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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 321 to 330.
Good Times
I loved Hinchingbrooke School growing up and the house just intrigued me. I remember my first year of sixth form in the house and my friends and I decided to look around the grounds where we came across the graves of Oliver Cromwell's ...Read more
A memory of Huntingdon in 2007
Gosforth Just After The War
I was born at the Ravensbourne Nursing Home , opposite All Saints Church in 1943. At that time my father was in the army and my mother and I lived with my grandparents in Henry Street, my oldest aunt lived next door. My ...Read more
A memory of Gosforth by
Graham & Fishers
The building nearest the camera on the right is (was) Graham and Fishers - founded by my great-grandfather Tom. His sons Alg (my grandfather) and Spencer worked in the business all their lives, and my father Douglas worked there until ...Read more
A memory of Chatteris in 1954 by
Grand Hotel Missing Archway
My mother says the two white pillars at the entrance to the Grand Hotel once supported an archway. During WW2 the Royal Navy housed sailors in the hotel who were bussed out each day. The bus was too tall to go under the ...Read more
A memory of Lyndhurst in 1940 by
Grand Hotel, Littlestone, 1963
I remember attending my aunt's 21st Birthday Party at the Grand Hotel in 1963. I was 3 years old. They had strung a fishing net from the ceiling of the ballroom and filled it with balloons. Every now and again ...Read more
A memory of Littlestone-on-Sea by
Grandad
Can anyone remember my grandad Mark Gregory? He had an Antique or Second Hand shop called The Mart, he died when I was young. I am doing a family tree and need to find as much info as possible about him to enable me to continue my search as I lost my father in 2004. Thank you
A memory of Chorley in 1960
Grandads War Days And Our Family Hols
My grandfather was stationed on the island "During the War"and was very friendly with a family from Arreton called Hendy. The mother's name was Lil and the father was affectionally called"Tit" (because he was ...Read more
A memory of Arreton by
Grandma
My grandma Annie Moody lived in Amble as a child. She was born in 1897 but I think they lived somewhere else first, but she and her parents are on the 1901 cencus as living in Amble. My mother (her daughter) Mary Maddison nee Stewart has many ...Read more
A memory of Amble by
Grandmother
I have little information, other than my paternal Grandmother was the eldest of 16 children born in Bradwell approximately at this time, or much earlier, possibly 1875 onwards. Her maiden name was Elizabeth Cook. A cousin of mine ...Read more
A memory of Bradwell in 1890 by
Granny And Grandpa
My memories relate to the war years and just after. My paternal grandparents lived in Scarisbrick. I can remember the house, kitchen and front and back gardens. It seemed a much bigger house than ours and probably was. I don't ...Read more
A memory of Scarisbrick by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 769 to 792.
There seems to be ample room beneath the wide arches of Llanfoist Bridge, but when the Usk floods the waters have often risen to the top of them and flooded the Castle Meadows in the foreground
The entrance arch, with its green gates, was demolished in the 1980s to allow access for lorries building the new leisure centre.
The pier has since been much built on, with varying degrees of success.
Looking very much a shadow of its former self, this windmill would have ground corn. In common with other mills in the area, it is a post mill, with the mill revolving round the central post.
The now much enlarged thatched house on the right is the only Bridge Inn building standing today; the left-hand one has been demolished.
Thatched cottages (right) stand between Woolbridge Manor and the River Frome, looking upstream from the five mediaeval arches of Wool Bridge.
The road is very different to its modern counterpart, and reflects how much the sea was the main way out of St Ives. Cars pass by today where boats were once pulled up on the beach.
Before the new resort grew up across the landscape, much of the countryside around the old village was open downland along the breezy coastal strip.
The house looks much the same today, though it is now a conference centre. The bridge in the foreground is 18th century, built of brick rubble with a moulded parapet.
The line is long-since closed, but this towering sixteen-arch structure stands as a lasting reminder of Victorian skill and energy.
The 775 employees at Wolverton Works in 1851 grew to 2,000 by 1860, with the LNWR the largest single employer in North Bucks; a company engine driver earned nearly four times as much as an agricultural
there has been considerable investment in rejuvenating and developing the town, so much so that apparently property prices in and around the town are now rising faster here than in
Mickleover, still known as 'the village' to its residents, is today not much more than a dormitory town to nearby Derby.
Much of the stone came from the ruined Fulbrook Castle, which had been given to William de Compton by Henry VIII.
Much of the stone came from the ruined Fulbrook Castle, which had been given to William de Compton by Henry VIII.
This view shows the late Norman arches of the cloisters. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries (1536-9) it became the property of Thomas Cromwell and soon fell into disrepair.
In the background is the 16th-century five-arched bridge which gave the village its name.
Not so much a castle as a huge castellated mansion, Cyfarthfa stands near Merthyr Tydfil and was built in 1825 for Robert Thomas Crawshay, a wealthy iron-master.
In previous centuries the old taverns hereabouts were much used by smugglers, who had brought into the Forest the contraband they had landed on the south coast.
A family picnic by the five-arched bridge originally built in the 16th century over the River Leven.
The buildings have not changed much, but the street has lost its hustle and bustle. Car parking was allowed at this time.
The street remains much the same today.
Much of the Hoo's 1053 acres of parkland were designed and laid out by Capability Brown in the 18th century.
The area has been much built upon in the century since this photograph was taken.
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