Places
12 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Bowling, Strathclyde
- Bowling, Yorkshire
- Bowling Green, Shropshire
- Bowling Green, Gloucestershire
- West Bowling, Yorkshire
- Bowling Alley, Hampshire
- Bowling Bank, Clwyd
- Bowling Green, Hampshire
- Bowling Green, West Midlands
- Bowling Green, Cornwall (near St Austell)
- Bowling Green, Hereford & Worcester
- Bowling Green, Cornwall (near Callington)
Photos
645 photos found. Showing results 101 to 120.
Maps
70 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
480 memories found. Showing results 51 to 60.
4th June 1961 Jfk Passes Through
It was 4th June 1961 and John F Kennedy was due to pass by Brentford on the Great West Road. The M4 had not yet been built. I went with my friend Graham around 7pm and joined the many people sitting on Macleans wall ...Read more
A memory of Brentford by
Visiting My Inlaws
In 1953 I used to visit my in-laws who lived at 19 Rumbold Road, Fulham. I remember when we walked along Kings Road towards the football ground there was an antique shop that had an unusual armchair in the window. It was carved in ...Read more
A memory of Chelsea by
May And Baker (Dagenham East)
The May and Baker factory, close to the railway station at Dagenham East was once one of the largest factories in the area. The company was best known for developing the drug quinine to combat malaria, often simply referred ...Read more
A memory of Dagenham by
1960s In The Parakeet
Spent a lot of my teen age life in the parakeet when Doug and Pam barker owned it. I have very fond memories of my time there. There are so many. I am Dave Kaye known as Danny then. The loss of Doug at the age of about 42 I ...Read more
A memory of Cliftonville by
Port Sunlight For A Raf Kid
I was born in 1958. My father was in the RAF. His mother, my grandmother lived at 6 Jubilee Crescent Port Sunlight. Whenever we moved from one RAF camp to another we would stay at my Nanas for a couple of weeks, while ...Read more
A memory of Port Sunlight by
Childhood
My maternal grandparents lived at The Beeches, 16 Clarendon Road and my parents and I lived with them for my first three years and then returned regularly for holidays for several years. I remember Worthington Park and always having to sit on ...Read more
A memory of Sale by
Wish I Could Remember More.
I too remember the bowling alley, and the Odeon cinema, the bus station, and the drip teacakes, and cups of hot tea,
A memory of Halifax by
Park, Fields And The Ivy House
I was born in 1947 - youngest of five (4 girls and a boy) lived on Seaforth Avenue. Motspur Park was a great place to grow up, we had such a wonderful childhood. As well as "The Park" at the end of Marina Avenue - ...Read more
A memory of Motspur Park
Donaldson Road
Wow, we first moved in to No 20 right on the corner opposite Davy Dun. We came up to stay at our grans in the late 60's. Great times spent helping 'the parky' and sittin around the Maypole with the great clang clang and waiting for ...Read more
A memory of Methilhill
Captions
169 captions found. Showing results 121 to 144.
They also made other sports equipment such as golf clubs and bowls.
Ten-Pin Bowling is played in the new pavilion. Pleated skirts, of the type worn by the two young ladies at the front of the picture, were fashionable at this time.
Further ahead there is a crossroads: turn left to the Rose Bowl cricket ground and Botley, and go straight ahead for Hamble.
Tennis courts and bowling greens and other sports facilities, which were funded by Chigwell Urban District, were made available for local people.
Sited imperiously overlooking the bowling green is the fine Victorian residence Merevale; its foundation stone is dated 7 September 1893.
Bowls is a quintessentially English sporting activity, and it appealed to the founder of the project.
Parish boundaries cross and re-cross with those of Myerscough and Barton - one boundary cuts through the bowling green of the Roebuck Inn, as it was known in earlier days.
The bowling green, which we see here in the foreground, still survives.
The Sugar Bowl stands south of the junction with Reigate Road, on the east side of the road.
Situated behind the Palais de Dance, off Humberstone Gate, and incorporating an early supermarket and ten pin bowling facility, the six levels of Lee Circle car park were intended to relieve the city
The park caters for cricket, tennis, and bowls, and it has a putting green. This is a marvellous asset for the community.
The Old Gang Mine, one of the area's oldest workings, is just a few miles from here, and miners would have trekked daily to enjoy the warmth and hospitality of the Punch Bowl Inn, which was built in 1638
The park caters for cricket, tennis, and bowls, and it has a putting green. This is a marvellous asset for the community.
It then became a ten pin bowling alley through the 'swinging sixties', and then a bingo hall.
Bowling's the ironmongers moved to Grove Road in the 1920s, and their shop became a branch of the Midland Bank. This has since been converted to a pub called 'The Old Bank'.
Besides the usual bar and bowling green, it boasted a library and reading room, and in the room above was Alderley`s first cinema.
There were two bowling greens and two children's playgrounds. The picture shows three buildings — the central one, a shelter, is still with us.
The massive mill on the right, part of the Bowling Green complex, still stands, and is now used by Damart.
This view is taken looking south towards Oving from Bowling Alley's junction with the North Marston to Whitchurch Road.
It was a sheep-cropped sward well into the 1920s, but the Council then covered it in bowling greens, high hedges and municipal gardens. Francis Frith's Sussex A Century Ago
Part of it was used as a rubbish tip, but landscaping began in 1905 with the laying out of the first bowling green.
The Lake Hotel had opened in 1872 with a floating landing stage, a subaqueous telegraph linking it to the booking office for ferry steamers, a skating rink, a bowling green and well laid-out
Over-arm bowling arrived officially in 1864, and the first Test Match was played in Australia in 1877.
All that now remains of the huge structure, apart from the surrounding earthworks, are the broken ruins of the 12th-century flint and mortar curtain walls within the bailey, which encompass a bowling
Places (12)
Photos (645)
Memories (480)
Books (0)
Maps (70)