Places
1 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
11 photos found. Showing results 681 to 11.
Maps
4 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 817 to 1.
Memories
1,362 memories found. Showing results 341 to 350.
1959 1969
I was born in 1959 at 20 Glebe Cour,t Mitcham to Percy Jack and Lillian Anne Agg. All my mother's side of the family lived in Micham - Ford - Atkins and Agg being the surnames. I have fond memories of Mitcham and of the parks and the pub ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham in 1959 by
Whatever Happened To Blyth
My family moved to Blyth in the early 1950s, leaving in 1959, just before everything seemed to go wrong. We had the Traveller's Rest pub at the junction of Regent Street and Thompson Street. On the other corner ...Read more
A memory of Blyth in 1959 by
Summer Holiday
My memory of Marske is that of a summer holiday from Oaklands Home (mentioned on a previous page), I think it was on an army camp? on the clifftop. The sea was blinking freezing but the beach was lovely. We would walk along ...Read more
A memory of Marske-By-The-Sea in 1959 by
Childhood Holidays
We stayed in a ramshackle bungalow on the Warren and Miss Doyle, the owner, stayed in an outhouse while she rented the place to us for the week! We had the most wonderful times there and went every year for a long time. Sunny days, ...Read more
A memory of Gronant in 1958 by
Bubbles Up Your Bum!
Just look closely at the picture, sitting on top of the fountain was half the fun & excitement of coming to the pool. Water wings under my arms and the supervision of Granddad Russell I made my first attempt at learning to ...Read more
A memory of Plymouth in 1958 by
First Holiday
My first holiday was when I was 9 years old (in 1958) and my parents and I came to Goodrington. We stayed at Beech Hurst which if I remember correctly was in Youngs Park Road. It was lovely. I made friends with a girl who lived next ...Read more
A memory of Goodrington in 1958 by
June 1958 A Frightening Experience!!!!
It was my 4th birthday and we were staying in Caister at the Sycamore Camp in a caravan that my Parents had hired for a 2 week holiday. So the date 13th June 1958 and we took a trip in Dad's old car up to ...Read more
A memory of Lowestoft in 1958 by
Holidays
I stayed here with my mother and sisters when I was 5 and later when I was 11. Then it was owned by the Holiday Fellowship (now HF Holidays) who ran walking holidays for families. I have very fond memories of the house and the area. ...Read more
A memory of Marske-By-The-Sea in 1958 by
Argent Street Grays
I too, was born in Argent Street, No 85, next door to Potters Shop. Only the alleyway divided our house from them, and two doors away from The Castle. I have fond memories of growing up in the early sixties, and my adventures ...Read more
A memory of Grays in 1958 by
Childhood Memories
My grandparents lived in Bryn Mynach Avenue (Beach family) and later my Uncle Fred & Aunty Doreen. My own mother had moved to London shortly after leaving school. My brother spent the war years in Ystrad and I have spent ...Read more
A memory of Ystrad Mynach in 1958 by
Captions
1,130 captions found. Showing results 817 to 840.
Another delightful view of the Cat Nab area of Saltburn, with the distinctive profile of Huntcliffe beyond.
Amroth is a former coal mining village at the southerly end of the 186 mile-long Pembrokeshire Coast Path.
The Frith archive contains a number of these posed group pictures; the majority seem to have been taken during the 1890s.
A family walk down Magazine Lane Slipway onto the beach. This is close to the site of the magazines: ships entering the Mersey had to deposit any gunpowder there during their stay in port.
Anstey's Cove, with Redgate Beach hidden on the left, was a favourite bathing spot for Agatha Christie, who was born in Torquay in 1890.
Traditionally in the ownership of wealthy occupants, the private steps leading down to the beach still belong to these houses, except those on the extreme left.
The largest seaside town in West Sussex, Worthing began to grow as a fashionable resort towards the end of the 18th century.
This bustling scene looks east to the pier pavilion and the pier. The bucket and spades, bare feet, donkeys and wickerwork basket chairs recapture a vanished era.
A hugely expansive beach here means that it never fills up with holidaymakers in this popular resort and former fishing and trading port.
Posed on Goscar Rock on Tenby's North Beach, these women were paid for their work as models.
Skegness's most famous fairground ride was the Figure Eight, which was regarded as a worthy rival to Coney Island!
The sands, which are extensive enough to give the full benefit of ozone to those who avail themselves of its health-giving properties, form an excellent bathing-ground, entirely free from danger.
By the 1960s, more and more holiday visitors were arriving by car as well as by rail.
Hunstanton is unique for north Norfolk resort towns in that it looks west across the sea and not east.
Oh, we do like to be beside the seaside! These sunseekers are thoroughly enjoying a paddle in the Channel.
This is a fine view of the 'lost beach' of Gorleston, so named because after years of erosion it has been reduced to a fraction of the size we see here.
At the beginning of the last millennium, marauding Danes landed on these sandy Devon beaches and put the village of Exmouth to fire and sword.
The unmade road leads from the village to the beach. The sand-dunes are covered with marram grass, which helps knit them together and prevent erosion on this windy coast.
From the beginning of the 19th century most resorts had bathing machines in which bathers could change while being dragged into the sea, initially by horses and later by winches.
Blue Anchor is a hamlet in Carhampton parish, and it takes its name from the local inn. In 1874 it became a halt on the Taunton to Minehead railway line, now the privately run West Somerset Railway.
Once a sleepy Devon backwater, Croyde's beach and bay was discovered by holidaymakers in the 19th century. With two huge caravan parks, this area fills up dramatically in the short summer season.
The old 'birdcage' bandstand was replaced in 1934-35 by an altogether grander affair with a seating capacity of three thousand people.
Heacham has the distinctive flat beach of this part of the West Norfolk coast.
The bathing machines are doing good business. In the 1720s, it was the custom for those 'taking the waters' to bathe in the sea.
Places (1)
Photos (11)
Memories (1362)
Books (1)
Maps (4)