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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 421 to 430.
Queen Elizabeth Grammar And Darlington In The 40’s And 50’s
QUEEN ELIZABETH GRAMMAR AND DARLINGTON IN THE 40’s and 50’s I was born and lived for 18 years in Pensbury Street. Then Hargreave terrace. And grateful for the 1944 Education Act. Still. ...Read more
A memory of Darlington by
Punch And Judy
During the summer season we had Punch and Judy shows on Looe main beach. The puppeteer would parade up and down the prom and beach on a pair of very tall stilts. This, of course, would get everybody's attention. He would 'advertise' his next show. Can't remember how much it cost though!
A memory of Looe in 1955 by
Pub Crown And Thistle Just Out Of View
I moved into the Crownd and Thistle about 1941 aged 4 and I left village in 1960. Arthur Benstead was landlord for many years. He and Muriel his wife retired just across the road to a house left by Mr Knowles ...Read more
A memory of Fulbourn in 1940 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
Properties & People
I, Ray Murphy, came across your site, re Shaw Mills, Yorkshire, U.K., as I was looking into events of my past life, for the benefit of my son’s Australian family, at the time of my 84th birthday, 19/9/35. I am the Patriarch of the ...Read more
A memory of Shaw Mills by
Probably My Finest Hours But Never Knew It
I started at Oughtrington as a very shy and quiet 12 year old in 1955. My first impressions were that I had been dropped off the bus, from Altrincham into a holiday hotel, not school. Progressing through ...Read more
A memory of Oughtrington by
Prince Albert Pub From 1952 Until 1968 When We Moved Away
I remember the Prince Albert pub very well and also being scared of their boxer dog, Chang, who used to roam freely on the common, I think you can see Chang in the forground of the picture. I ...Read more
A memory of Salfords by
Post War Memories
I was raised in Mountsorrel in the Soar valley near Leicester. It was a Norman village that lay alongside the river Soar under Castle Hill. The hill got its name from the mote and bailey type 12c castle built by the Beaumonts – ...Read more
A memory of Mountsorrel by
Post War Harlesden.
I was born in Tredegar, South Wales in April 1941. My mother had been evacuated to that small welsh town when she fell pregnant with me in 1940. We lived with her parents. My dad was away doing War things. We moved back to London ...Read more
A memory of Harlesden by
Post Office And Telephone Switchboard
I still have my post office savings book stamped Mere Warminster Wilts. I deposited 5/-. The telephonist use to sit almost in the doorway with a little switchboard our number was Mere 282. I think it was the shop with the blind next to the arch.
A memory of Mere by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 1,009 to 1,032.
These two extravagant arches were later built using stones from the abbey ruins, but were too narrow to accommodate modern traffic.
A niche above the gateway once held a figure of the Virgin Mary and below, much worn by the passage of time, is carved a lion's head.
It required 49 arches to carry the track across the wide Calder Valley, the highest of which are 70 feet above the river.
Both town and castle were put to the torch; the damage to the former was such that when reconstruction started much of the town was built outside the old walls.
This street scene is much altered from that of the 1906 photograph.
The little girl, strapped in for safety and concentrating on hanging on, looks much more Victorian than post-war, and should be in the Lifeboat Day Parade.
It is an ideal centre for exploring the Isle of Purbeck, and there is much of interest within the village boundary.
This was part of Thomas Baldwin's ambitious new town between the river and Bathwick of the 1790s, much of which was never built.
Inland, Ingoldmells is very much kiss-me-quick hat country, with vast caravan parks, amusement arcades and a fun fair whose piece de resistance is the Volcano.
Begun as a manor house, Bishop Auckland was castellated around 1300, though much of the building shown here dates from the extensive alterations carried out in the 17th and 18th centuries.
The parish church interior enshrines much of Warrington's history through its memorials.
Road traffic was much lighter in the 1950s, but even then Sankey Street represented a major bottleneck on the main A57 Liverpool to Manchester Road.
Viewed from the west, the facade of the west front is dominated by the Great West Window and the Triple Arch Door. The west front of many cathedrals were intended to be showpieces.
"The Countrey, especiallye of late years, is fallen much to trade to sea, and a great part of the Countrye people are seamen and maryners ... many of them continually abroade at sea"
Looking towards the Castle at the end of the street, note the agricultural implements on sale on the left, the Lion Hotel further down the street, and on the right-hand side the arched
Much further south along the High Street is St Mary's Guildhall at the junction with Sibthorp Street.
The arch led to the rear of the Angel Hotel yard, owned at that time by John Jasper Taylor, who also had a temperance hotel, Deanery House, further down Church Street.
Four years after the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act, the much larger Guildford Workhouse opened, doing away with this smaller poorhouse.
In 1924, after engineering reports of a dangerous weakening of one of the main arches, the old bridge was closed to traffic.Work on the new Waterloo Bridge was started in 1937.
Chester sits on a sandstone spur north of the Dee, which winds past the ancient castle, begun in 1069, but now much modified by late 18th-century additions.
This scene remains much the same today. Note the free-range geese. In the distance is the small stone tower above Abereiddy that overlooks the popular Blue Lagoon.
Much has changed since this view was captured, not least the fashions. The man to the right is wearing what was known as a demob suit: after military service, you were allowed a new suit.
The building is now much altered in appearance. Visible amongst the trees is Wellwood (background, centre right). Bardsea once had a pier where pleasure steamers from Fleetwood tied up.
The curtain wall faces the River Usk, with the arched water gate in the centre. Boats could enter the castle this way – there was a small quay to the rear of the tower.
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