Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- North Walsham, Norfolk
 - North Berwick, Lothian
 - North Chingford, Greater London
 - Harrogate, Yorkshire
 - Whitby, Yorkshire
 - Filey, Yorkshire
 - Knaresborough, Yorkshire
 - Scarborough, Yorkshire
 - Clevedon, Avon
 - Weston-super-Mare, Avon
 - Selby, Yorkshire
 - Richmond, Yorkshire
 - Ripon, Yorkshire
 - Scunthorpe, Humberside
 - Pickering, Yorkshire
 - Settle, Yorkshire
 - Skipton, Yorkshire
 - Saltburn-By-The-Sea, Cleveland
 - Norton-on-Derwent, Yorkshire
 - Rhyl, Clwyd
 - Chester, Cheshire
 - Llandudno, Clwyd
 - Grimsby, Humberside
 - Durham, Durham
 - Nailsea, Avon
 - Southport, Merseyside
 - Brigg, Humberside
 - Colwyn Bay, Clwyd
 - Redcar, Cleveland
 - Bath, Avon
 - Grange-Over-Sands, Cumbria
 - Cleethorpes, Humberside
 - Sedbergh, Cumbria
 - Barrow-In-Furness, Cumbria
 - Barmouth, Gwynedd
 - Dolgellau, Gwynedd
 
Photos
2,952 photos found. Showing results 141 to 160.
Maps
9,439 maps found.
Books
39 books found. Showing results 169 to 192.
Memories
1,548 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.
Living In Headley Down
My dad and uncle Peter, owned the garage; Wilson and Pickett Ltd. I went to the Grove school and Bramshott Court School. I llved in the bungalow next door, I was called Fran Wilson. We lived there from when I was 3 until I was 12 - we then moved to North Yorks, where we remain.
A memory of Headley Down in 1956 by
Roan Boy Finally Gets To Braithwaite
All through the lower forms at the Roan School in Blackheath, London SE3, I was aware of the existence of Braithwaite Camp. It had been started in 1930 by a former headmaster of the school, Mr Arthur Hope, on ...Read more
A memory of Braithwaite by
Land Army In North Somerset
My name is Barbara Tucker & I spent several happy years during the Second World War at Pilton in Somerset. I was in the women's land army and can remember those wonderful days working with the animals and ...Read more
A memory of Pilton by
A Small Childs Memorys Of North Seaton
I was born Patricia Gowans in 1957. My mam was Ettie Humble, my dad was John Gowans and we lived 3 Third Single Row with my nana and grandad Gowans. My dad worked at the pit till it closed, then he went to ...Read more
A memory of North Seaton in 1961 by
Top Rank
I can remember very vividly going to Top Rank on a Saturday morning with my friends. We all went to Francis Coombe Secondary School. We all had so much fun dancing on these Saturday mornings... loved it...The memories of this and all ...Read more
A memory of Watford in 1968 by
Intake Junior School Class 1 4
I remember cheering because we had beaten another class at something and Miss Tune sent me outside the door! I was only 5/6 years old and was very upset! My next teacher was Miss Rustling who was very ...Read more
A memory of Intake in 1945 by
Growing Up In Northwood Hills
I was born in a small maisonette off Alandale Drive and my mum still lived there until she passed away aged 95 in 2014. The border between Hillingdon/Harrow runs across the back garden. I attended Pinner Wood ...Read more
A memory of Northwood Hills in 1960 by
Watford's Lost Factories
Living in north Watford from 1952 to 78, I have fond memories of factories such as the British Moulded Hose. Not a nylon stockings factory as its title may sound, but an asbestos factory which I remember one day caught fire ...Read more
A memory of Watford by
Evacuation To Fonab Castle Sept.1939
Evacuation - September 3rd 1939 The government decided that mothers and children should be moved to the countryside away from areas at risk from bombing. On the 3rd, parents and children all gathered at their ...Read more
A memory of Pitlochry in 1930 by
George And Dragon, Ashton Under Lyne
My mum and dad ran the George and Dragon. It was my dad's first pub after leaving the RAF. I'm almost certain we were the last ones in there before it was demolished. I have very vague memories of the ...Read more
A memory of Ashton by
Captions
2,676 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.
This is St Mary's parish church in South Street, seen from the north-east.
Looking northwards we see hostelries, public houses and stores straddle the streets, highlighting Penrith's importance as a thoroughfare on the London to Carlisle and North East to North
It would be difficult to say now, without consulting early maps, exactly where 18th-century Whetstone began and finished on the Great North Road.
From 1862 North Wall was the Dublin terminus for London & North Western Railway steamers from Holyhead.
On the north bank, Embankment Gardens were laid out in the late 1880s with wide tree-lined walks along the river bank.
The south bank always remained less formal than the north; it is a series of islands separated from the 'mainland' by a back river, which in its turn is separated by weirs from the north river.
Here the photographer looks north-west along the east bank wharves towards the site of the swing bridge that opened in 1908, five years after this view and now rebuilt in its turn as well as superseded
Here the photographer looks north-west along the east bank wharves towards the site of the swing bridge that opened in 1908, five years after this view and now rebuilt in its turn as well as superseded
Moving south we cross the River Ivel by the Girtford Bridge to reach the town of Sandy on the Great North Road, the A1.
Nash's great early 19th century urban scheme, his 'Royal Mile', led north to terminate in Regents Park.
Kits Coty House, a prehistoric burial monument, is sited on a crest of the North Downs a mile or two to the north of Aylesford village.
To the north lies the Kettleness, or rather what is left of it. During a violent storm in 1829, the cliff fell into the sea taking most of Kettleness with it.
Stone, slate and lime would be carried from the north, and Wigan coal from the south.
Monk's Buildings 1894 From Angmering we head north across the Downs to Storrington, now a large village that started its expansion in late Victorian and Edwardian times.
Originally a village of scattered houses beside a long rectangular Green with a triangular north end, it spawned a commuter village in the 1930s based around Croxley Station.
On the north side of the north chapel is a tomb in memory of Richard Strode (died 1464); this bears an unusual representation of the Holy Trinity, showing God holding a crucifix between his knees and
Mansfield lies some 14 miles north of Nottingham and to the west of Sherwood Forest.
North of the old town, isolated farmhouses and cottages were engulfed in Victorian expansion.
Going north to the Godstone to Reigate road, that part of the A25 that runs along the greensand ridge south of the North Downs, we reach the village of Bletchingley.
We are looking north on the approach from High Barnet Underground Station. The church of St John the Baptist dominates this readily-recognisable street scene on the crown of the hill.
At intervals on Severn Side, both north and south, steps leading from the sandstone quays were constructed.
To the north lies the Kettleness, or rather what is left of it. During a violent storm in 1829, the cliff fell into the sea taking most of Kettleness with it.
By the end of the 18th century, the Severn north of Bewdley was becoming increasingly difficult to keep open for navigation, and groups of men had to be employed to bow-haul craft between Bewdley and Coalbrookdale
Fishing was a vital local industry in this remote north-eastern port, and in 1914 there were still more than 200 boats registered here.
Places (9301)
Photos (2952)
Memories (1548)
Books (39)
Maps (9439)

