Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- New Row, Dyfed
- Forest Row, Sussex
- Chigwell Row, Essex
- Low Row, Yorkshire
- Middleton One Row, Durham
- Red Row, Northumberland
- Collier Row, Essex
- Stoke Row, Oxfordshire
- Row, Cumbria (near Kendal)
- Row, Cornwall
- Row, Cumbria (near Langwathby)
- Corner Row, Lancashire
- Heather Row, Hampshire
- Helmington Row, Durham
- Higher Row, Dorset
- Authorpe Row, Lincolnshire
- North Row, Cumbria
- Medhurst Row, Kent
- Rotten Row, Berkshire
- Tittle Row, Berkshire
- Winkfield Row, Berkshire
- The Rowe, Staffordshire
- Spooner Row, Norfolk
- Alder Row, Somerset
- Smokey Row, Buckinghamshire
- Shiplake Row, Oxfordshire
- Ulcat Row, Cumbria
- Row Green, Essex
- Row Heath, Essex
- Tottenhill Row, Norfolk
- Frost Row, Norfolk
- Will Row, Lincolnshire
- West Row, Suffolk
- Orange Row, Norfolk
- Cold Row, Lancashire
- Dean Row, Cheshire
Photos
710 photos found. Showing results 641 to 660.
Maps
566 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,284 memories found. Showing results 321 to 330.
Blacksmiths Forge On Kingston Road, Ewell
Further to Pat Dickinson's memories....... I remember it vividly,especially the roaring fire and clanging iron -,the way the huge (to me) horses stood so still. We used to stop on our way home from school. There ...Read more
A memory of Ewell in 1940 by
1955 In Heol Las
Hi, Mary Rogers was my aunt. I stayed in the row of houses opposite M Adlams, who lived with her mother. The two ladies, would sit in their chairs and just talk for hours with people coming and going, buying pop and sweets. I ...Read more
A memory of Llansamlet by
Memories Of Dan Y Parc
Many of the things that happened at D Y P were taken as normal. During the winter we ran around in the snow without shoes on, and why? because we did not have a second pair of shoes. The only pair we had were school shoes ...Read more
A memory of Dan y Parc in 1953 by
Mere Memories
My memory is not so much of the Wheatsheaf, although I did visit a few times during my youth, a nice place to take a new girlfriend for a drive. But nearby is the Mere, a huge lake in the middle of an agricultural area. When I was a kid ...Read more
A memory of Raby
Waterfoot Is Still My Home After 54 Years.
I was born in 298 Burnley Road East on August 18th 1945. The Nurse who delivered me was Nurse Bowe, who was a good friend of my Gran's (Teresa Whittaker, nee O'Brien). All my Aunties and Uncles were born in ...Read more
A memory of Waterfoot by
Fishing Tackle Shop Lowfield Street
I was born at Livingstone Hospital. My parents had the fishing tackle shop at 68 Lowfield Street, Dartford. Both my parents were on the Dartford and District Angling and Preverseavation Society Commity. It had ...Read more
A memory of Dartford in 1945
Middle Rainton Part 4
Pathways were made up of compressed dirt, West Street (facing West Rainton), Back Row (facing the Meadow’s Pit), Lewis Street running parallel with Back Row) and Cross Street running parallel with West Street). Krone ...Read more
A memory of Middle Rainton in 1940 by
Middle Ainton Part 5
Nearly every house had an outside brick coal shed, as this was the only method of heating and cooking. Most houses had a short set of about 2-3 steps in the middle due to the slope of the land they were built on, ...Read more
A memory of Middle Rainton in 1940 by
A Lifehood Of Memories During The 1950s
orn in 1942 at 23 Park Avenue, Northfleet, I went to Dover Road School then Colyer Road Secondary School. Churchill's dairy used to be opposite Colyer Road School and allotments where we had a plot. The ...Read more
A memory of Northfleet by
Pinnington Son
My dad was the butcher, we had the first shop in the row opposite the Goat pub, do you remember Roy?
A memory of Forty Hill by
Captions
827 captions found. Showing results 769 to 792.
This view of the Bowness Ferry shows a full coach-and-four just about to set out from the Bowness side of the lake, with the coachman at the front steadying the nervous horses.
Another view of the Bowness Ferry shows a full coach-and-four just about to set out from the Bowness side of the lake, with the coachman at the front steadying the nervous horses.
Through Stone Bow we look back across the setts to its rear, with the High Street stretching away into the distance through the archway.
This view shows the ornate cast-iron balcony of the Saracen's Head Hotel, now shops, and the tower of St Peter at Arches beyond Stone Bow, built in 1720, demolished in 1933 and largely rebuilt in Lamb
St Mary-le-Bow is thought to occupy the site of the first Saxon church to be built on the peninsula - this is where St Cuthbert's remains were housed when they were first brought to Durham.
There have since been a few comparatively minor changes to the structure, most notably the conversion of the garage doors into a double bow window.
Hardy Tobacconists are now Caburn secondhand books, while the buildings on the left - now divested of hung tiles - are the secondhand and antiquarian booksellers Bow Windows Bookshop.
The double bow-fronted house has acquired an awning.
The road curves attractively to the bowed end of the 18th-century Town Hall. The gilded swan now faces to the left.
Rufus Castle, or Bow and Arrow Castle as the locals usually call it, was probably named after William Rufus, the second Norman king.
Bognor's is a delight, with stucco cottages of varying heights and designs, many with balconied bow and bay windows, fronting an elongated square.
Another view of Waterhead shows the Waterhead Hotel, built to serve the increasing numbers of tourists who were arriving by train at the lakeside station at Bowness, and catching a steamer up the lake
This is still a popular pastime on Windermere, which is England’s largest lake; the calm reaches of the southern end of the lake provide a quiet backwater compared to the busy area around Bowness
The building is known to locals as Bow and Arrow Castle; Portland's old parish church, ruined by landslides, is within its grounds.
Peeking over the roof of the bow-fronted pharmacy is the castellated tower of St Mary's church, a building that dates from the 12th century, and largely rebuilt in the 15th century.
This is still a popular pastime on Windermere, which is England's largest lake; the calm reaches of the southern end of the lake provide a quiet backwater compared to the busy area around Bowness
The provision of the public gardens of the Promenade at Bowness also followed the coming of the railway in 1847, and the increased popularity of the Lake District as a health-giving holiday resort
Both gentlemen wear suits and bow ties, and everyone wears a hat. The four iron bollards replaced the earlier turnstile which charged a small entry fee to the gardens.
This is still a popular pastime on Windermere, which is England's largest lake; the calm reaches of the southern end of the lake provide a quiet backwater compared to the busy area around Bowness.
The calm reaches of the southern end of the lake create a quiet backwater compared to the busy shores around Bowness.
This slightly later view looks across what has become the motor launch area of the Bowness boat station.
The church was enlarged to its present form in 1870, and it watches over the older part of Bowness, which is known as Lowside.
A clipper-bowed excursion steamer crowded with passengers heads along the Dee, attracting little attention from the young fishermen on the bank.
Note the cross-shaped ends to the tie-bars which help prevent the walls from bowing out on the house next to the telegraph pole, and on the next but one along.
Places (93)
Photos (710)
Memories (1284)
Books (0)
Maps (566)