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Photos
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Memories
1,131 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.
Windmill Road, Brentford 1945
My parents, Nora & Harold (Jock) Palmer, lived at 112 Windmill Road, Brentford where I was brought up, along with my twin brother David and older brother Michael. Later we were joined by sister Janis and brother Jeremy ...Read more
A memory of Brentford by
Visitation Preparatory School Bridport
1962 to 1966, the car journey from Surrey was full of tears, taken by my mother and grandfather, on arrival the tiled entry and the Nuns in full habits greeted us, I was soon ushered in to the hall with promise of ...Read more
A memory of Bridport by
The Volunteer Inn
Volunteer was built in 1703 and as far as we can find out, it possibly became a pub in 1840s. It ceased trading in 1973 when it was sold by the brewery to the Gray family. The Grays converted it back into a house. We ...Read more
A memory of Twyford by
Reminders Of My Youth
I remember being taken to the village when I was very young - I believe one of my great uncles ran the Pub - One of the ubquitous Jermy Family - I am coming to Norfolk to try and research my roots at the end of July this ...Read more
A memory of Great Hockham by
Boots The Chemist
I own part of the building which is the second one on the left of the photo. Many years ago there was another building on the end, on the corner of Market St and Well Lane. Our building is now the Fat Frog Cafe and lots of ...Read more
A memory of Liskeard by
The Scene Today
The old town hall in the centre has changed little although at the time this photo was taken the town hall was in the building to the left known then as the Anchor Hotel, now Bar Vin. The fine building to the right has gone to be ...Read more
A memory of Horsham by
My Early Years In Longton 1870s To 1940s
I was born in Longton in 1933 at 151 High Street Post Office, Longton. All my childhood was spent there with my grandmother, Sarah Wright and my great aunt Matilda Ward (my grandmother's sister). Between them ...Read more
A memory of Longton by
Working On Church Street Six Times
When in 2018 I started work as a supervisor in a shop on Church Street, it occurred to me that I had had four jobs & two volunteer posts on the road. The first was a temporary job in the late '70's under the ...Read more
A memory of Great Malvern by
Whetstone Hey Shops
I remember the triangle of shops at the top of Whetstone Hey in(1962), when I was about 7 years old. If you came up Whetstone Hey, from Valley Drive, on your left was Wartons Newsagents (what we called The Paper Shop). It was ...Read more
A memory of Great Sutton by
Devonshire Baths
I was born in Eastbourne, Upperton Road Nursing Home. I have fond memories of being taken by my Father to the Devonshire swimming baths. This would have been between 1964 to 1967 I would have been 5 or 6 years old. Through the large ...Read more
A memory of Eastbourne
Captions
252 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.
This view of Allerford's much photographed 15th-century packhorse bridge and ford looks much the same today. The guesthouse to the right now has a public bar.
We are looking towards the imposing building of the Presbyterian church in the distance and Groundwell Road.
The archway to this bar dates from the 11th century; this is the oldest of York's gates.
Bedale is also just off the A1 and on the route into Wensleydale from Leeming Bar. This
Low Petergate (seen in the previous photograph) and High Petergate run up to Bootham Bar, one of York's still surviving medieval gates in the city walls, and to the Thirsk road out of the city.
We can see the monument topped by a dragon marking Temple Bar on the City boundary in the middle of the road.
This photograph shows the east end of London Road, with Sainsbury`s grocery shop to the right and the Capitol Cinema on the left.
This is an odd echo of the past; moored hereabouts 700 years ago would have been ocean-going trading vessels loading up with tin.
The billiard rooms housed in the Oxford Buildings are on the right; the Palace Cinema is further down the street; and the cycle shop and the Rendezvous Milk Bar are opposite.
We have moved nearer the High Street junction.
Many of the people seen here would be day trippers rather than resident visitors, having come for a breath of fresh sea air on one of the many excursion trains from inland.
Tucked in behind the Bear is an early 19th-century rebuilding of a timber house, which may have survived the Great Fire.
From the early days of caravan parks, it soon became apparent that visitors wanted the sites to become 'one stop shops' incorporating shopping and entertainment.
Flood Gate Bar 1892 On the right of the picture is the 15th- century God's House Tower, formerly the south-east gate of the old town and one of the earliest artillery fortifications in Europe
The bridge was not always as level, strong and wide as this.
Axmouth was once a considerable port, and boats navigated the River Axe as far as Colyton. Certainly the Vikings, raiding this coast, used the Axe to seek plunder far inland.
This panoramic view looks across the rapidly-drying mud flat called the Salty in the foreground, and shows the point jutting into the River Teign and the pier at the Den.
Looking towards the Bull Ring from Union Street, we see (right) the rebuilt Strafford Hotel and the former shops, now a café bar.
The pavilion has lost its minarets, but it is now equipped with both an indoor snack bar and a self-service buffet. We can also see Prince's Park with its colonnade to the right of the casino.
Huddled around the quay were Yarmouth's famous Rows, close to 140 narrow foot passages. They were likened by Dickens to the bars of a gridiron.
The Wells whelkers are renowned along this coast for their persistence in pursuing their trade. Whelking was not always a comfortable affair.
'The newest fashion newspaper and the oldest-style tavern still jostle each other now as they did a century or more ago.'
Despite the fact that post-war rationing was still in force, this market town was thriving. On the left is an optician's, A Bateman's.
In the Middle Ages silt formed the Doom Bar and cut off the harbour for the larger sailing vessels, but Padstow still continued to be a very important trading port.
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