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1,127 memories found. Showing results 341 to 350.
Recollections Of Ash Vale By Lt Col Taylor
RECOLLECTIONS OF ASH VALE By Lt Col Taylor Ash Vale, viewed from the main route through it the Frimley and Ash Vale roads would not have appeared to alter a lot during the last 100 years. Houses do now ...Read more
A memory of Ash Vale by
Bridlington Street
We lived at 70 Bridlington street from 1974 until 1988. The house and all those in Park rise were brand new. At the time our friends were Delvine and John Street, Chris and Roy Bartram, Carol and Gary Frear, Janet and Geoff Smith and ...Read more
A memory of Hunmanby by
Selsdon Primary School 1965 1970
I went to selsdon primary school from the age of 5. I had a twin brother Christopher we were in the same class all through school - there were two classes to each year. Miss Bjork was Headmistress and yes she was quite ...Read more
A memory of Selsdon by
One Horse Town!
Had 5 yrs living in west dereham, beautiful village, nice walks across fields,and lots of wildlife unfortunately not a lot else going for it, a very close knit, verging on clicky community! shame so much money was put into a village ...Read more
A memory of West Dereham
Life Was Full Of Promise!
I have lived in Margate since 1953 having moved from Ilford in Essex, I was 3 years old. My nan and granddad owned a small guest house in Vicarage Crescent, Margate. My life was a little upheaved as my father left my mother, ...Read more
A memory of Margate by
Tuck Shop Opposite
I remember Mrs (fatty) Parson, she put her foot through the floor one day much to the classes delight. I live up by the heath and took the penny ride to the National School every day on the 467 bus.
A memory of Dartford by
Childhood & Youth In West Kilburn
After the war, my brother David & I returned to Kilburn from evacuation. Our Smith family was re-united at 28 Kilburn House, Malvern Place, where mum (Isobel) continued to live during the Blitz. Dad ...Read more
A memory of Kilburn by
The St. Cuthbert's Grave Of Henry Fenwick Pickering
IN 2008 I visited Doveridge to find any remnant of my great grandfather Henry Fenwick Pickering. His grave, "erected by public subscription" lies beside the pathway to the door of St. Cuthbert's under ...Read more
A memory of Doveridge by
Upton Very Early In Ww2
I was flicking through this site and was amazed to come across this photograph that features my mother Joan Sington (nee Phillips) along with her Spaniel 'Major'. The picture was taken before my mother had my elder brother Jonathan ...Read more
A memory of Upton by
Proud To Have Come From Shaw
I think to reminisce is great. At 76, I find myself doing this quite often and am drawn back to Shaw, and to High Crompton, where I was born. The house I was born in on Rochdale Road, near the Bull's Head Pub, is still ...Read more
A memory of Shaw by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 817 to 840.
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 cyclists here obviously felt sufficiently safe not to worry too much about hugging the kerb and avoiding brushes with the traffic.
The lofty 12-arched viaduct spanning the Tamar took four years to build. Since opening in 1908, it has carried the branch railway from Plymouth to Gunnislake, and formerly Callington.
Along with places like Looe, Polperro and St Ives, Mevagissey has long been a fishing port much loved by artists and visitors alike.
Like Teignmouth and Lyme Regis, Dawlish was much-loved by fashionable society during the 19th century.
The road has not been improved very much today.
Notice the horse-drawn cart and the absence of much other traffic.
Along the line is the ninety-nine-arch bridge containing 800 million bricks.
Although the register dates from around 1560, the beautiful interior of the church owes much to restoration carried out in the mid-1800s.
Fashion decreed that much of Georgian society should follow the monarch's example, creating a minor bathing resort on the edge of what had been a lonely estuary.
The road here winds down towards the sea, past the church of All Saints, with its decorative wrought-iron arch. Behind the church is an attached farm and tithe barn.
The north aisle wall was moved when the aisle was widened in 1846, but the Norman arcades remain; they have three bays, with unmoulded arches of simple imposts with slight chamfering.
These date from the 17th century, and comprised several shops in an arched arcade with living accommodation above.
The three-arched structure was designed by George Rennie and opened by King William IV in the 1830s.
The cannon would not have been much use in 1940. Mablethorpe is to the right and north.
Looking along the Staffordshire & Worcestershire Canal towards the T-junction with the Trent & Mersey, an attractive bridge carries the latter's towpath across the former on a slender brick arch with
These date from the 17th century, and comprised several shops in an arched arcade with living accommodation above.
This fine view of Dorchester from the meadows alongside the River Frome shows the county town of Dorset much as Thomas Hardy would have known it when, as an apprentice architect, he would walk there
The church, St John the Baptist is essentially 14th century, although much of the interior has been re-modelled.
After 50 years, very much as one would expect, with the exception that one of the pine trees has been removed.
This huge parish church, the size of a cathedral, owes much to the generosity of Bristol's merchants, such as William Canynge (who died in 1396) and his grandson William Canynge the younger (1394?
Much of the surrounding countryside has been used for military training since World War Two.
Much later it became a fashionable seaside resort, its seafront and neighbouring streets lined with handsome Georgian and Victorian villas.
In 1908 Marble Arch lost the neighbouring neighbourhood building, and the ground was cleared as far as Park Lane to the left. It was on an island site, but this had not yet become a roundabout.
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