Places
36 places found.
Did you mean: street or streetly ?
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Heathfield, Sussex (near Cade Street)
- Street, Somerset
- Chester-Le-Street, Durham
- Adwick Le Street, Yorkshire
- Scotch Street, County Armagh
- Friday Street, Surrey
- Potter Street, Essex
- Boughton Street, Kent
- Newgate Street, Hertfordshire
- Streetly, West Midlands
- Shalmsford Street, Kent
- Green Street Green, Greater London
- Boreham Street, Sussex
- Park Street, Hertfordshire
- Cade Street, Sussex
- Appleton-le-Street, Yorkshire
- Hare Street, Hertfordshire (near Buntingford)
- Romney Street, Kent
- Trimley Lower Street, Suffolk
- Streetly End, Cambridgeshire
- Hare Street, Hertfordshire (near Stevenage)
- Brandish Street, Somerset
- Colney Street, Hertfordshire
- Langley Street, Norfolk
- Silver Street, Somerset (near Street)
- Street, Yorkshire (near Glaisdale)
- Street, Lancashire
- Street, Devon
- Street, Cumbria (near Orton)
- Street, Somerset (near Chard)
- Bird Street, Suffolk
- Black Street, Suffolk
- Ash Street, Suffolk
- Broad Street, Wiltshire
- Brome Street, Suffolk
- Penn Street, Buckinghamshire
Photos
24,920 photos found. Showing results 1,601 to 1,620.
Your search returned a large number of results. Please try to refine your search further.
Maps
1,622 maps found.
Books
3 books found. Showing results 1,921 to 3.
Memories
6,666 memories found. Showing results 801 to 810.
School
I went to Perry Street School when it first opened, and Town Old School, down School Road. From The Sun pub end you went down steep steps to enter the classrooms. Quilterbank was a lady teacher, she had a house on the opposite road to The ...Read more
A memory of Billericay in 1920
Trenchers Restaraunt
On Saturday evening, I set off for Whitby on the bus and arrived there for 6;30 pm. On arriving, I thought of asking the bus driver what was the last bus back to Middlsbro, but then thought there was not much point as I was only ...Read more
A memory of Whitby in 2012 by
Good Old Days In Salford
I was born in Salford, one of six children to Edith Casey and Ken Casey, their other children consisted of Linda, Alan, Barry, Ken, Paul and of course myself. We lived at number 50 Bury Street which was off Ellor Street. My ...Read more
A memory of Salford in 1955 by
Raf Herscha Hill
I, along with two others at any one time, was posted to the RAF fixer station on Herscha Hill. We stayed with Miss Bella Scott at a house called Noranside, halfway up Kintore Street. I was there from 2 Feb 1954 to mid-November ...Read more
A memory of Auchenblae in 1954 by
School
My name was Bernadette Conway (Connie). I went to St Josephs RC School in Caldwell. When I left school I worked in a small shop called Worthingtons. I remember shops over the road were Freeman Hardy and Willis, Yoxalls and the Home and ...Read more
A memory of Nuneaton in 1965 by
School Days
I lived at 27 Radnor Street, last but one tennament to be flattened. My first year of school was at the "new high school", on Bouquanaran; 10 class rooms open, we had to scramble among the bricks to get to class. Then I went to Radnor ...Read more
A memory of Clydebank in 1940 by
Barkingside High Street
I remember the fish shop/butchers in the High Street, it was called Gurrs and they used to smoke the fish out the back of the shop. It was situated between Boots and Rossis. Before the swimming pool was built, the land was ...Read more
A memory of Barkingside in 1964
Hartlepool
I am trying to find any info on my grandmother, Frances E Robson who was born in Hartlepool 1894. Her mother was Mary Robson born 1874 and her mother was Elizabeth Frances Robson born 1842. Her husband was William Robson. They lived ...Read more
A memory of Hartlepool by
Southey Street As A Kid
Just read a memory of standing outside the factories of Clark Chapmans and asking if anyone had any bait left. I did the same myself, it brought back powerful memories of living in Southey Street until I was 11 years old. My ...Read more
A memory of Gateshead in 1958 by
Durnford St School
I lived on Abbey Road at no.42. I went to Durnford Street School and was known as 'Bash Baker'. Anyone out there still? Does anyone know what happened to Sylvia Penny.
A memory of Middleton in 1954 by
Captions
5,435 captions found. Showing results 1,921 to 1,944.
The London, City & Midland Bank can be seen on the corner of busy Cornmarket Street and Carfax. Note the signs attached to the lamp standard, pointing to London and Gloucester.
Back in the Market Place, the photographer looks south down the High Street. Cook's on the corner is still a newsagent and stationer, Goodnews.
High Street c1955 There are some fine memorials within the church, notably those of the Oglander family, who had held land nearby since the Norman Conquest.
It is lunch time in the village; the post office is closed, and the lady street vendor is resting on her cart.
The view looks down Cornforth Hill towards Bridge Street; the whitewashed building was the Oak Tree Inn.
High Street c1955 The water pump on the corner of the green is dated 1897 - the year of Queen Victoria's jubilee - when Newick was still a small village.
Here we are looking down Queen Street from the junction with Kettering Road, towards the centre of the village where the spire of the church can be seen in the distance.
A deck chair and a roll of wire fencing stand outside the ironmongers in Spring Street.
We are looking towards Bridge Street and the River Barle. Across the river on the hillside is The Cottage, a mock-Tudor house with plaster pargetting standing amid rhododendrons.
This is located just 50m from the cathedral; it fronts onto the Bailey, a mediaeval street that follows the spine of the peninsula from the historic Market Place to Prebends Bridge.
Beyond, the elegant arcade belongs to the Town Hall, jutting out into the street on stone piers, built in 1861. Torrington's prosperity was founded on wool.
The wide streets could almost have been tailor-made for the demands of the motor car age.
Originally the site of a Roman villa in the 1st or 2nd century AD, and on Ermine Street, this outlying hamlet has gradually been absorbed into expanding Gloucester; many of its older houses have been
The 15th-century spire soars above the River Wreake on its south side, with the now rather mundane Village Street to its north.
A row of Cotswold stone cottages in Vineyard Street, named after the former abbey's vineyard which was once nearby, built in the style so beloved of all who love the towns and villages of the Cotswolds—and
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
Tucked away among 'surroundings that are indescribably beautiful', boats nestle in the placid harbour waters of this picturesque village with its long, straggling street.
Union Street is littered with shop names and advertisements. On the left are signs for Frisby's Boot Stores - 'Best for Shoes, Best for All'.
This view looks from the junction of the High Street and South Parade on market day.
It was in Abbey Street during the Great War that Palladinos had their ice-cream business.
Canon Street is the turning to the right, and opposite are the railings which once surrounded C J Vaughan's, the wine and spirit merchants (now Threshers).
The bricks that were used to build many of the houses in the High Street were the same kind, the magnificent Fareham Reds, that built the spectacular railway viaduct, whose seventeen arches loom
Rows of houses and quaint ironstone cottages line the street; in the distance is the familiar figure of the local postman out making his deliveries.
Norwich Street reflects Fakenham's essential character. None of its brick buildings is outstanding, yet the total effect is one of pleasing harmony.
Places (385)
Photos (24920)
Memories (6666)
Books (3)
Maps (1622)

