Places
1 places found.
Did you mean: arthur ?
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
4 photos found. Showing results 81 to 4.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 97 to 1.
Memories
96 memories found. Showing results 41 to 50.
Royston Army Camp.
Was posted to camp in 1954 and demobbed in 1957.Was called up for National service but the CO persuaded you to sign on as a regular and you got 28 days leave.Probably nowadays they would be Court Marshalled for suggesting ...Read more
A memory of Royston by
Royal National Hospital Ventnor
I worked as a nurse at the hospital from 1955 to 1956 and went back for the first time in June of this year. It was really nostalgic to be there again, even though the hospital has long gone the Botanic Gardens are ...Read more
A memory of Ventnor in 1956 by
Raoc Army Camp
I was stationed at 104 Veh Coy (AFV) RAOC in the early fifties as an eighteen year old conscripted soldier. I have tried all ways to find any details of the camp and had no luck at all. I would appreciate it if anyone can recall ...Read more
A memory of Royston in 1951 by
Power Boats
The wooden clinker built boat, painted white in the lower right of the picture, was one of a pair of fast boats that the late Arthur Shippey and Tom Louis ran from coffee house end steps. They would call loudly ""half hour trips round the ...Read more
A memory of Whitby in 1953 by
Over Here
Over Here... The first American troops to arrive in our part of the world arrived in 1942. The came to what became know as Sudbury Camp (nearly in Marchington). A hospital was built at the present site of HMP Prison. A great ...Read more
A memory of Stramshall by
Old House On Harbour Road
The house on Harbour Road was where I lived with my parents and sister for approx two years. We lived in one room in the gable end, then we were moved to the other end which was three rooms in a row. We lived there till ...Read more
A memory of Kinghorn in 1941 by
My Life In Elm Park, Hornchurch
I could go on and on with memories. Myself and my parents moved from London to Arbour Way, Elm Park on 24th August 1953. I went to Ayloff School from 1954-1960, when I left to go to Suttons Secondary. We moved to ...Read more
A memory of Hornchurch by
My Grandmother Had A Boarding House
My grandmother had a boarding house on Grand Parade on Hayling Island through the fifties into the sixties. Our summer holidays every year were to visit her in Hayling Island with all our extended large families ...Read more
A memory of Hayling Island
My Golden Years At Stokes Bay
I was born in Gosport in 1929, my father was a long serving seaman in the Royal Navy and so our family life was all things navy - so Stokes Bay was a big part of our lives. I had three elder sisters who were frequently ...Read more
A memory of Stokes Bay by
My Ealy Days In Ilkley War Time. 1940/46
I was born in Ilkley in Sept. 1940, my parents first residing at Ben Rhydding. After my birth we moved to a house in Valley Drive, living next door I recall to a lady called Miss Booth. From our rear garden we ...Read more
A memory of Ilkley by
Captions
211 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.
This view shows the entrance to the harbour dominated by the 95 ft-high Chaine memorial tower, a nineteenth-century reproduction of a round tower.
This beach in tidal Poole Harbour was handy for campers here in the northern part of Poole, who were some distance from the extensive beaches at Sandbanks and Canford Cliffs.
Bovington Camp dates back to the First World War, and is the home of the Royal Armoured Corps. The surrounding heathland is heavily used for tank training.
the south of Dell Quay and at the head of the Bosham Channel, today stands alongside the Bosham Yacht Club quay, and is the haunt of many yachtsmen who enjoy the charm and tranquillity of Chichester Harbour
Wharf Road is now a busy thoroughfare, the harbour wall a sturdy granite breakwater crowned with iron railings and tall street lamps.
The lane from Port Isaac descends the cliffside to its neighbouring harbour, also once important for fishing, and a place where sailing vessels were beached to be loaded with Delabole slates.
Above Torquay harbour stands Vane Hill, seen here from the Rock Walk.
Chesapeake Mill dates back to 1820 and was built by John Prior, a miller, partly of woodwork from an American warship of that name, captured by the much smaller British HMS 'Shannon' off Boston Harbour
A paddle steamer lies moored at the harbour wall. The first steam- driven paddle vessels, the 'Ivanhoe' and the 'Warspite', arrived in Weymouth as early as 1827.
Havant is a busy little town overlooking Langstone Harbour; its church recalls the time of Roman and Norman invaders.
This pier was known as the Commercial or Pleasure Pier, to distinguish it from the town's old harbour pier.
King Henry VIII built two defensive castles on either side of the Medina to protect the entrance to the older harbour at Newport.
Two young lads stand by the harbour wall with their strings of onions. With their grimy jackets and trousers, they give every impression of having endured an uncomfortable passage.
We see Brownsea Castle from the south-west, with Canford Cliffs' high ground visible across the harbour to the right.
In Manx folklore the village was named 'the Harbour of Mary' in honour of the Blessed Virgin by Celtic missionaries, who founded a chapel here.
The older Saxon church of Holy Trinity then dominated the harbour scenery. The present church was begun at the end of the 11th century by the Norman cleric Roger Flambard.
The harbour is packed with an assortment of sailing craft, including fishing smacks, brigs and sailing barges.
Looking up the harbour, we can see a small Dutch coaster loading china clay at two chutes. Such motor ships were common around the Cornish coast from between the wars until the 1970s.
Close to the quays at Poole is the 18th-century Harbour Office, once the Old Town House, a club for ships captains.
Dell Quay, at the northern end of Chichester Harbour, was the landing place for cargo ships delivering goods to the market at Chichester.
The expanse of harbour we see here is only a small part of this natural seaport.
Located on a spit overlooking Portsmouth Harbour, the castle was regularly used by kings when visiting Portsmouth. Henry VIII came here with Anne Boleyn.
This grand hotel is well-sited: it overlooks the interesting harbour of Fowey, where there is always some activity to watch, and there are more distant views out to the English Channel.
West Street 1930 This town was a considerable port in the middle ages, but the silting up of its ancient harbour led to a decline in trade.
Places (1)
Photos (4)
Memories (96)
Books (1)
Maps (71)