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5 photos found. Showing results 661 to 5.
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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 331 to 340.
Son Of Sgt Bruce Krrc
My father was stationed at Chisledon Camp from 1939 to 1942. Living in Littlehampton on the south coast, threatened with invasion, my mother rented the end thatched cottage of the row of cottages which face the railway line ...Read more
A memory of Chiseldon in 1940 by
Some Memories From 1916 To The 1950s
My father believes the man in the carpenter's apron in photographs 60995 and 60995x may be Francis New. The carpentry business he is standing in front of was eventually taken over my grandfather, John Bray, ...Read more
A memory of Chilton Foliat
Some Historical Facts Of The Plumbs In Barroby
The newspaper published at Grantham in England, the original home of the ancestors of the well known Plumb and Parker families of Mills, Pottawattamie, Cass and Shelby Counties, recently carried a story ...Read more
A memory of Barrowby by
Snellings The Butchers
Not so much as a memory but an observation. The butchers shop shown in foreground - Snellings - is still there and the board to the front of the railings had what was on that week at the local cinema - The Commodore, long since demolished.
A memory of St Mary Cray in 2006 by
Smallbridge And All That
The place name comes from a narrow bridge over a stream that forms the boundary between Rochdale and Wardle on Halifax Road, by The Red Lion pub as it was then. Folk who lived in Smallbridge were once called "Sandknockers" ...Read more
A memory of Smallbridge in 1940 by
Small Place So Much Drama
Llansilin should be the setting for a film or TV serial given the dramatic events that have occured there in relatively recent history. My mother was born in Llansilin in the 1920s and regales me with stories of sad deaths ...Read more
A memory of Llansilin by
Small Heath Memory
I was born at 54 Herbert Road on January 21st 1940 a war-time baby although I remember nothing of the bombing raids that wrecked a number of the houses in the lower part of the road where the bus garage and the railway line ...Read more
A memory of Small Heath by
Slough '61
Alot of these shops are gone, but the town really hasn't changed much as I still see it as it was.
A memory of Slough by
Siv's Mk2
No stranger to Friday bath night (did we really only bathe once a week?), where the tin bath was hauled into the kitchen in summer & in front of the fire in winter & filled by kettle. As I got older my dad would take me down to the ...Read more
A memory of West Gorton by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 793 to 816.
The elegant, five-arched ashlar bridge of around 1830 is named after the Countess of Wilton, whose husband - a well-known figure in the hunting world - bought Egerton Lodge and entertained the rich and
Cley (rhymes with sky), once a busy port, is now a sleepy village, where nothing much has changed since this photograph was taken.
The area still retains much of this rural charm with its canopy of trees and ancient hedgerows.
Visitors to the great sandy beach at Perranporth can also explore the caves and arches in the cliffs on the west side at low tide.
Much of this avenue survives the outer bailey, although it is now bounded by 1920s low walling, and the ornate benches have been replaced by more utilitarian ones.
Complete with a stream and ornamental flowerbeds, the Valley Gardens still give much pleasure to shoppers seeking relaxation after shopping in nearby Carlton Street.
Melcombe Bingham's manor house dates back to the time of the Plantagenet kings, though much of the present building is Tudor.
Poole continues to function as a port, though as much now for leisure craft as merchant shipping.
This straggling village has spent much of the last fifty years being dominated by a structure that proved to be as controversial - the Winfrith Atomic Energy Station.
Compared with the view of Porthminster Beach taken in 1890, this view indicates how much the holiday industry had taken over the St Ives beaches.
Originally 15 acres in extent, it is now much silted up. The bill for the original construction of the dam was £945.
Lyte was the much loved Victorian parson of the fishing town, living high above the town at Berry Head House.
Leading from the old village to the harbour beyond, this 16th-century arch, originally fitted with a portcullis and gates, was built to protect the settlement against pirates and smugglers.
Much of Puddletown was rebuilt in 1864, but the area around the church suggests the village that the young Hardy would have known.
Its building was begun in 1332 to connect Huntingdon with Godmanchester, and the respective authorities paid for three arches - note the different styles - with the builders starting on each bank and meeting
In the foreground stands the arch of the Conservative Club, with the solid brick-built Cambridge Hotel next door. The honey-pot style telegraph poles carry lines to the surrounding
However, the influence of the Roman Occupation is still much in evidence. The Devil's Highway, a Roman road, passes through the village, and two Roman milestones can still be seen locally.
The arched gate and the lodges at the entrance to Haigh Park are thought to date from c1840.
The broad High Street, once the site of the market established under a charter from Edward I, was, at the turn of the last century, still very much a rendezvous for the cattle and sheep farmers of the
Much of the street plan was changed. One example was that Thieves Lane became Station Road.
Winchester College has owned much of Sydling for generations, ensuring a continuity of building and landscape conservation missing in so many Dorset villages.
Characterised by pointed arches and fine stonework, the old gate is also renowned for its statue of George III gazing down the High Street, dressed as a Roman and wearing a toga.
They look even more unnatural these days, as they are severely pollarded in the French style, but they would be much missed if they were removed.
The handsome Leadmill Bridge, on the Grindleford approach to Hathersage, spans the Derwent in three graceful gritstone arches.
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Social Life At The Pool!
I was five years old when this photograph was taken and would have occasionally been taken to the pool by my mother. My older sister would have come too. As we got older it was a great place to hang out as teenagers and we ...Read more
A memory of Brentwood by