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Memories
347 memories found. Showing results 41 to 50.
Boston Manor Part 3
Next to the underground depot on the Boston Road was a litte shop called The Acorn. It sold sweetss etc. On the other side of the line where offices are now was Boston Bumps. This was a piece of waste land where we rode our track ...Read more
A memory of Brentford by
Boyhood Memories
I was born in 89 Abbot Street, just off Sunderland Road, in 1932, then we moved to the Gateshead end of Redheugh Bridge. When the Second World War started we moved to 20 Brussel Street. The Davidson family lived in the flat above ...Read more
A memory of Gateshead in 1940 by
Boynton Hall Revisited 1975 By Matthew Strickland Quarles
I visited Boynton Hall during my year long study abroad as an English Speaking Union Scholarship recipient to Wrekin College, in Wellington, Telford, Shropshire, during the academic year ...Read more
A memory of Boynton in 1975 by
Boys Camp
By kind permission of the Lord Ashcombe, the Holy Trinity Junior Boys Club, Wimbledon, camped for four weeks every year on Ranmore Common. Most of us were choirboys, so we augmented St Barnabas's choir for their services twice each ...Read more
A memory of Ranmore Common in 1930 by
Bramley (Lincroft Crescent) In The Years 1951 To 1967
Bramley In The Years 1951 To 1967 A conversation with Lynden Flint From: john.holliday11@btopenworld.com To: Lynden Flint Hi Lynden. I do hope you are well and still on-line. I ...Read more
A memory of Bramley by
Bread, Cakes, Cafe And Masons
Of course everybody know this building as Taylor's. However not everybody knows that there is another floor above the restaurant level. It can be clearly seen in the photo. This was the location of Cannock's Freemasons Temple for many years and may still be so for all I know.
A memory of Cannock
Bread, Cakes, Cafes And Masons
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A memory of Cannock
Bristol's Lost Streets
A list of just some streets which have disappeared or changed their names since 1900. Barr's Street (Lane until 1848) - Milk Street to St James's Barton - demolished and built over post-war for Broadmead Shopping ...Read more
A memory of Bristol by
Bristol's Queen Square
Driving a major road through Queen Square. It is located in the historic heart of Bristol, just off Bristol's Floating Harbour, about half a kilometre south of the city's main shopping area, Broadmead. The square was begun ...Read more
A memory of Bristol by
Bristol, High Street And The Blitz 1940
Bristol's High Street scene of many strirring events in Bristol's history the heart of the city was destroyed and lost forever in 1940. As a city with docks and industry at its heart, Bristol was a natural ...Read more
A memory of Bristol in 1940 by
Captions
374 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.
Here we have a magnificent view of the broad sweep of the breezy seafront at Dover, with the castle overshadowing the town from four hundred feet above, and the Roman Pharos clearly visible beside the
The broad valley of the Derwent near Whatstandwell opens out between well-wooded sides, as we can see in this picture.
Here we have a magnificent view of the broad sweep of the breezy seafront at Dover, with the castle overshadowing the town from four hundred feet above, and the Roman Pharos clearly visible beside the
A short flight in this light aircraft, even just a few hundred feet up, would give the sightseeing holidaymaker a marvellous view of both the coastline and the Broads inland.
This pretty river between Coltishall and Aylsham has three locks and seven bridges, creating quite a bit of work for the boat crews.
To the right of Balliol College is the famous Martyrs' Memorial, commemorating the 16th-century Protestant martyrs Latimer, Ridley and Cranmer, who were burned at the stake in nearby Broad Street.
This colossal building, once home of the controversial Greater London Council, was designed by Ralph Knott and begun in 1912.
Running above the course of the Flete brook, this broad street, now one of Torquay's premiere shopping malls, was constructed in 1865 to replace the narrow lane of slums and fishermen's cottages that originally
The winding hole (where boats are turned) lies to the east of and adjacent to the Great Wharf.
The High Street again, and a much busier scene is shown.
At the top of the town Brunel's Great Western Railway crossed the broad wooded valley on a mighty viaduct.
While wheat straw is often used as the roofing material, the chances are that these houses will be thatched with longer-lasting reed from the Broads.
Many of the inns along the broads contain the word 'Ferry', commemorating long-gone crossing points.
Two of Oxford's most famous colleges, Trinity and Balliol, stand on the left side of Broad Street, famous for its bookshops, among which is Blackwell's.
With its shallow sandy bays, broad grassy downs, civic gardens, and terraces of unpretentious lodging houses, Bude is almost completely an Edwardian construction.
The shop awnings and broad-brimmed hats provide welcome relief from the glare of the sun as pedestrians stroll up and down to the seashore.
Before its restoration, Plaxtol's church was an almost complete 17th-century creation, with a fine hammerbeam roof and an ancient reredos.
Unlike most broads, Ormesby is accessible by road rather than river and preserves a quietness not usually found during holiday periods.
This elaborate entrance to the church at Broad Chalke, near Salisbury, has been well-maintained throughout the years.
The broad expanse of the A24 London Road heading towards Stonecot Hill and Morden is lined with parked cars and bicycles outside the shops.
Spacious houses and hotels are situated around a dramatic woodland chine leading down to the sea.
The broad High Street, once the site of the market established under a charter from Edward I, was, at the turn of the last century, still very much a rendezvous for the cattle and sheep farmers of the
Although called a terrace, the houses are by numerous builders and unified by broad style alone.
Wroxham is at the western gateway to the Broads, and profited greatly from the late 19th-century boom in 'messing about in boats'.
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