Places
4 places found.
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Photos
24 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
23 maps found.
Books
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Memories
22 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
I Miss You
You are the only decent village in the whole of England except for Frogmore I miss the large fields with the llamas I miss trying to rollerblade on the road and falling over I miss the first time I did everything in my house ...Read more
A memory of Newton Longville in 1992 by
Folkestone Sandgate Road
On the extreme right, you can just make out the showrooms of the Folkestone Motor Co., main Austin dealers. This became Henlys, and I worked there for a few years from around 1968 to 1977. Across the road was a nice ...Read more
A memory of Folkestone by
Drayton Jottings
Drayton Jottings. Auntie Alice, in Kings Avenue, regularly seen, out on her front doorstep, she kept it clean, the 'raddled' red stone was buffed to a shine, 'Old fashioned traditions', here continued,so fine. one day, from ...Read more
A memory of Market Drayton by
Frogmore Cafe
My parents Monica and Jack Garrett ran the Frogmore Cafe from 1954 until 1978 when it became a dry cleaners when they then sold it to Sketchleys in 1980. I was their only son Richard.
A memory of Abergavenny in 1956 by
Memories Of Market Drayton
This once sleepy hamlet was first home to me, a better place for childhood there could not be. Little Drayton church and it`s `olde` Sunday school. fishing excursions with Uncle to Buntingsdale pool, Dalelands West; ...Read more
A memory of Market Drayton by
Those Were The Days
I moved to Ireland Wood from Portsmouth when I was 4 years old with my Mum and dad who was in the navy. We lived at 42 Raynel Way. The house was built by the Council. Most of the houses like ours were made of prefabricated concrete ...Read more
A memory of Cookridge by
Chideock School
I started school at the age of five following in the footsteps of my brother John and sister Pam and walking each day to school from Quarr Lane, sometimes we used the footpath starting at Frogmore farm and coming out above the ...Read more
A memory of Chideock in 1943 by
Totteridge Buckinghamshire
We moved to High Wycombe just after the war when Dad came home and he went back to work for the London Transport at the bottom of Marlow Hill. We lived at first in Suffield Road and I went to the Church Of England ...Read more
A memory of Tylers Green in 1947 by
Growing Up In Handley
My family moved to Handley in 1947 and I spent the rest of my childhood there. Our family name is Harris and my parents were Drs Paul and Zoe , they had five children. We lived off the road to Deanland. I never could ...Read more
A memory of Sixpenny Handley in 1950 by
Binbrook School Reunions
I started searching just this evening (1/9/13) for a former school chum, Ashley Cook and was amazed to find this site and all the comments which I remember so well. I attended the junior school and remember both Mr Hogarth ...Read more
A memory of Binbrook in 1955 by
Captions
20 captions found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Frogmore Mill, together with The Cottage, extended in 1927 to become the new boardroom for Apsley Mill, has survived to be transformed into a new venture, the Apsley Paper Trail.
Frogmore Pond provides one of the best shots in the Frith archive.
Frogmore Creek makes an eastward journey from the Kingsbridge estuary, narrowing by the medieval road bridge.
This view looks west towards Frogmore Road, and shows a new private housing development. The parish church of All Saints is a familiar landmark in the centre distance.
The Frogmore Café (left) offered busy shoppers a break until 1969, when it was taken over by Sketchleys the cleaners.
Centre left is the Bethany Baptist Church, which opened in 1827 when 30 members left the Frogmore Street Church.
Frogmore Street begins near the bank on the right, site of the medieval north gate. The pedestrians walking towards the camera are heading for the High Street and, no doubt, the market.
Centre left is the Bethany Baptist Church, which opened in 1827 when 30 members left the Frogmore Street Church.
The Frogmore Café (left) offered busy shoppers a break until 1969, when it was taken over by Sketchleys the cleaners.
Frogmore Creek makes an eastward journey from the Kingsbridge estuary, narrowing by the medieval road bridge.
Frogmore Street begins near the bank on the right, site of the medieval north gate. The pedestrians walking towards the camera are heading for the High Street and, no doubt, the market.
Frogmoor was once surrounded by prominent citizens' fine Georgian houses, which have now all gone.
It took a number of years to carry out the process of dividing up the land, laying out roads, digging drains, planting thorn hedges, improving the land, and harvesting the crops from more and more
Motorised transport is in the process of taking over from more traditional methods, while the three small boys on the left have to make do with two bikes between them!
Little has changed here over the years, apart from more robust material being added to the sea defences along The Parade.
A walk along the downlands around Long Bredy shows this to be a very old landscape, with barrows and monoliths from prehistory and ridge paths from more recent times.
The view is little changed since the 1950s, apart from more parked cars. Sturrick House on the far left, once a temperance hotel, is 16th-century, but the ground floor frontage is 18th-century.
The ancient open space of Frogmoor had from 1877 until the Second World War a fine cast-iron fountain and well trimmed trees.
For example, the frontage to H Samuel in Church Street was rebuilt in 1929; also, various fake timber-framed buildings were added that towered over Frogmoor, such as Parker- Knoll's offices on
The street is little altered, apart from more formal pavements and roadway.
Places (4)
Photos (24)
Memories (22)
Books (0)
Maps (23)