Places
6 places found.
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Photos
2,406 photos found. Showing results 681 to 700.
Maps
41 maps found.
Books
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Memories
2,828 memories found. Showing results 341 to 350.
The Nursery St Annesredhill
I was in a children's home here and fostered to a lovely couple, Mr and Mrs Smith, at Little Stone Cottage, Haslemere. My natural mother wanted me back and I never saw them again. I recently found this information out in ...Read more
A memory of Redhill in 1960 by
Tintwistle Days!
My recollections are from the mid 1950s to early 1960s. These were happy days wandering the Longdendale Valley and the Torside Reservoir, usually with guitar slung over my shoulder in the company of Olwen Brown, a local 'Tinsel' ...Read more
A memory of Tintwistle in 1956 by
Coldwaltham Cottage
I used to live at the neighbouring house, The White House, owned by a Miss Charman. She also owned the above cottage and rented it to the Charly Williams family. He was the local green grocer. There was Joe, Mrs. Harris and ...Read more
A memory of Coldwaltham in 1953 by
Stubbington 1956 1968
Thank you Lorraine for the many memories you brought back. I lived in Queens Crescent from when I was born in 1956 until I moved to Australia in 1968. I also remember the bakery on the corner of the lane by the school and ...Read more
A memory of Stubbington in 1962 by
Petworth Mill
My grandparents Hylands live in the millhouse at Petworth. When I was a child, after moving from a farm at Sutton my grandad Bill worked for the mill driving a flour lorry and nan Olive used to sell tickets to men wnting to fish along ...Read more
A memory of Petworth in 1970 by
Honeymoon
Alas my wife passed away in 2005 but my memories are still very vivid re St Columb Minor, maybe someone reading this will know where I am talking about, our honeymoon was spent in a cottage next to the village pub, Mr & Mrs ...Read more
A memory of St Columb Minor in 1963 by
Wallasey Village
Where St Marys is now used to be a narrow lane with sandstone cottages. I remember one day in the early '50s seeing them demolish these cottages. They wrapped a steel cable round the bases, attached it to a tracked bulldozer and pulled. The cottages simply folded in on themselves. I was quite sad.
A memory of Wallasey in 1950 by
Canal Memories
I grew up at Bulls Bridge and my maiden name was Betty Miles. I went to Western Road school from the age of 5 to 14 and spent all my single life at Bulls Bridge because dad worked for the British Waterways and we had one of the ...Read more
A memory of Southall in 1942 by
Family Holidays
My grandparents lived in Brenchley for many years, and all our summer holidays in the 1950s and 1960s were spent there. We lived in London so I really looked forward to the summer! My grandparents lived near Castle Hill, and on the ...Read more
A memory of Brenchley by
Down Town Shopping With My Mum Aunt Edie
I remember shopping with my mum & aunt every Saturday. When we were finished with the shopping we would visit a little cafe right next door to Woolworths. After I had drank my bottle of Tizer, I was ...Read more
A memory of Littlehampton in 1953 by
Captions
2,020 captions found. Showing results 817 to 840.
There are two large Georgian houses and some nicely thatched cottages. It is still a peaceful village, although there is more traffic.
take a rest on the steps, as the greystone cottages, now part of a Conservation Area, cluster around the greensward in the background.
This photograph of Lulworth village shows how Dorset cottages looked when they were the workaday homes of local labourers and fishermen.
The cottage on the left has been replaced with gardens; the wall on the right was once used as a place where slaughtered pigs were scalded and skinned.
The chimneys of the textile mills fill the valley bottom, alongside the winding railway line and grim terraces of the millworkers' cottages. Above them, the moors watch over, unchanged.
With its old cottages, stepping stones and ancient arched bridge, it possesses a unique, almost hypnotic serenity.
These cottages lie on the road down from the school, one of the first church schools in Somerset. The thatch looks so picturesque today.
Of Queen's Park's 43 acres, thirteen came from the two landowners, and a further parcel was purchased from the Earl of Crewe in 1904 to provided a park keepers' cottage, a bandstand and a
Where the lock-keeper's cottage once stood is now an attractive recreational area with seats and information boards recording the history of the canal.
Delightful dark brown granite cottages hug the narrow choked streets of Mousehole (pronounced Mouzel).
The building on the left, now demolished and replaced by St Thomas's Church Hall, was a cottage for the tannery workers.
Some of the buildings on the tip of Sandbanks are coastguard cottages.
The lock keeper's neat and tidy cottage garden is noteworthy, as is the view across the water meadows to the steeple of St Lawrence's church.
It is heartening to think that this view has changed only in the growth of the background trees over 40 years and the removal of thatch from one of the 18th-century cottages.
With the faded lime wash and rough appearance of the cottages and walls, this scene has an almost Mediterranean air about it.
The post-enclosure brick cottages on the left have now been replaced with modern housing. In the distance is the Manor House, once home of Lancelot 'Capability' Brown, the famous landscape gardener.
As fishing declined, the fishermen's wives sold teas from their cottages. The shops survive, and the fishing stores and salting sheds to the left are now craft workshops.
The village is blessed with fine country houses as well as more modest cottages, built from locally quarried stone that has mellowed to the colour of honey on butter.
The new Old Neptune was a conversion of two cottages; at the time of this photograph it was a local brewer's Tomson & Wotton's house.
The building was perhaps thatched originally, but is now pantiled, with sloping dormer windows like the cottage next to it. On the bench a villager watches the photographer.
Today the pub has been converted into cottages, but the name survives, because they are called Cross Keys Mews.
In the distance is the Green, an industrial area with tanneries and a brewery as well as cottages.
Another view of Reeth, looking down across the gritstone-slabbed roofs of the cottages of the village, which was another important lead mining centre during the 18th and 19th centuries.
As the name of this cottage suggests, Worstead was one of the main centres of the weaving industry, which made Norfolk one of the wealthiest regions of medieval England.
Places (6)
Photos (2406)
Memories (2828)
Books (0)
Maps (41)

