Photos

27 photos found. Showing results 1,101 to 27.

Maps

195 maps found.

Books

158 books found. Showing results 1,321 to 1,344.

Memories

3,712 memories found. Showing results 551 to 560.

Whitchurch Town Hall Saturday Night Dances

I remember attending the dances in the Old Town Hall. The promoters use to bus people in from all the local towns - Wem, Ellesmere, Malpas, Nantwich and Wrexham. I lived in Whitchurch and had an older friend ...Read more

A memory of Whitchurch

Childhood Holidays In Orford

Looking at these photos of Orford, my main impression is how little Orford has changed over 70 odd years. Add modern cars and some colour and these views would still look the same. Our family spent many happy holidays in and ...Read more

A memory of Orford by dellahughes

Wartime Memories Of Wincanton

I arrived in Wincanton as an Evacuee in 1940/41 and lived for a while with my Uncle Frank and his family. My uncle at that time owned Bayford Garage. I was only about 6 yrs of age and quite naturally missed my mother ...Read more

A memory of Wincanton by unamuir333

A Very Cold Bottom!! 1973/4

I was born in Pontefract. Christened and Married, as were my parents, in All Saints Church in Pontefract by the Reverand Fawkes, now diseased. I went to Chequerfield infants then Willow park junior school and Pontefract and ...Read more

A memory of Pontefract by lhlb

Before The Fire.

We moved into 1Greenhill Rise in 1958 when it was the very edge of town, the United counties bus turned around next to the house. We watched the building all around us and watched them build St Andrews, it was directly across the street from ...Read more

A memory of Corby

Stan Laurel's Ulverston

The thin half of the world's greatest movie comedy duo, Laurel and Hardy, was born in Foundry Cottages, Ulverston, now Argyle St., in 1890. He was born and lived in his grandparents' home until the age of 6. His grandfather, ...Read more

A memory of Ulverston by Eric Willoughby

Manor Park

How many happy hours I spent in this park as a child, teenager and young woman. The gardens by the tennis courts were so well kept and I remember sitting on the benches there with my mother when we walked back from town. I remember hiring ...Read more

A memory of Aldershot by jokelly015

Park Lane.

I moved to Park Lane in 1948.I was about 2 years old.Lived there with my Family till about 1956.It was all fields at the back of our house.At the top of the road was the Junior School I went to.It had about 4 class rooms.I can still remember ...Read more

A memory of Thatcham by annbothamley

Anyone With Memories Of 1940's And 1950's

Is there anyone who can share similar memories of Barking particularly of the Eastbury and Town areas. At 81 time passes so quickly that memories are the only thing w have left. Clifford Smith

A memory of Barking

Looking For Family And Friends From 'old' Birkenhead

Hi, I have just found this great site - thank you! I am trying to write some family history, especially about our life in Birkenhead, for my two daughters - who have grown up in Scotland - where my ...Read more

A memory of Birkenhead by gorillagoodall

Captions

5,112 captions found. Showing results 1,321 to 1,344.

Caption For Manchester, The Assize Court 1886

The Strangeway Estate had been bought around 1859 for the purpose of building a gaol and these courts.

Caption For Worcester, The Guildhall 1936

Incredibly, the Guildhall only narrowly escaped demolition in the 1870s, when Alfred Waterhouse (architect of Manchester Town Hall) presented a plan for its replacement.

Caption For Corby, Corby Hotel C1965

Situated in Rockingham Road, this grand building soon became a major landmark of the nascent industrial town when it appeared on the scene in 1936.

Caption For Tunbridge Wells, The Pantiles 1885

Then, just as it is today, this area of the town was an exclusive parade of expensive little shops, smart tea shops and expensive restaurants.

Caption For Llanfair Caereinion, The Railway C1960

The Welshpool and Llanfair Railway still chuffs its way along the eight-mile narrow gauge line between the two towns.

Caption For Hitchin, Brand Street C1955

The large building, centre left, is the old Town Hall, with the Library and Mechanics' Institute to its left (now Council offices).

Caption For Manchester, Town Hall 1889

In 1866 the Corporation decided that the design for the Town Hall should be by open competition, a normal 19th-century practice for civic buildings.

Caption For Maltby, Manor Road C1955

Manor Road would not win any architectural awards; in fact, the picture could have been taken in any one of a hundred or so towns where similar houses were built.

Caption For Stockbridge, High Street C1955

The Georgian Town Hall of 1810 regularly holds antiques auctions and the town is well-known as an antiques centre with plenty of shops in which to browse.

Caption For Rochdale, The Esplanade 1892

Looking towards the town centre from Manchester Road.

Caption For Bridport, East Street 1940

Deep shadows engulf the Greyhound Hotel (left), with the Town Hall behind, in this lunchtime view westwards to Colmer`s Hill (centre).

Caption For Barnstaple, Rock Park 1890

Then, in 1879, William Rock, a local man who went to London and made a fortune, returned home to improve Barnstaple.

Caption For Hemel Hempstead, High Street 2005

Council, the Commission for New Towns, the Civic Trust and the High Street Association promoted a street improvement scheme, and over the years the High Street has been cleaned and restored

Caption For Belford, The Cross And Main Road C1950

In 1639, about thirty years after the Border raiders and reivers had been ruthlessly suppressed by James II, Belford was still described as 'the most miserable, beggarly town, or town of sods, that ever

Caption For Haslemere, High Street C1955

Back in Surrey, the route reaches Haslemere; we look south-west along the High Street into the market place of this small town, with the 1814 Town Hall closing the vista.

Caption For Abingdon, St Nicholas's Church And Guildhall C1955

This dates from around 1130, and was built for Abbot Vincent around a courtyard.

Caption For Dorking, View From Ranmore 1888

By 1849 the railway was running a service from east to west, and Dorking Town station was the first to be built at the edge of the town.

Caption For Towcester, Town Hall C1965

Further south, Watling Street widens to form a market place complete with town hall and a corn exchange.

Caption For Leicester, Prince Rupert's Gateway And St Mary De Castro Church C1955

A prominent Norman castle mound, the remains of the town walls, including Prince Rupert's Gateway, the castle hall and St Mary de Castro church form the finest historic enclave in the city.

Caption For Luton, The Andrew Carnegie Public Library 1924

IN SPITE of the depression, the town's population grew to 36,404 in 1901, and the town grew richer.

Caption For Maidenhead, Bridge Street 1890

Poor old Maidenhead: a rather good Georgian coaching town on the old London to Bath road, it was overlaid by Victorian development after the railway arrived in 1841, and has really suffered from ring road

Caption For Hitchin, Bancroft Recreation Ground 1931

Even today, open fields are within walking distance of every part of the town.

Caption For Tregaron, View From East 1933

Tregaron is a small nucleated town, probably based on a Welsh maerdref where the lord held court.

Caption For Wotton Under Edge, Church Street 1900

On the far side of the street are the almshouses bequeathed to the town by the former Sheriff of London Hugh Perry, who held the office in 1632.