Places

2 places found.

Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Photos

Sorry, no photos were found that related to your search.

Maps

9 maps found.

Books

Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.

Memories

1,544 memories found. Showing results 41 to 50.

Peveril St

I was born 12 peveril St battersea in1949 went to Bolingbroke school spent a lot of time in battersea park, in the 50s we moved out in the 60s due to slum clearance. Have so many happy memories of those days. My name is Derek strapp if anyone remembers me I would like to hear from them.

A memory of Croydon by Derek Strapp

Margaret Burdenie Nee Rushby

I was born at Easton Hall in July 1944. My father was away at sea in the Royal Navy and my mother told me that the residents of Eaton Hall had moved into the servants' quarters to let the Hall be used as as a maternity home for service wives. Our family lived nearby in Retford.

A memory of Eaton Hall by Margaret Rushby

Learning To Swim On The Rye

I was born in Amersham Hospital in 1956. It should have been the Shrubbery, but it was full on the day I decided I had had enough of the womb. Cut to the mid 60's and I'm a student at Crown House Primary in London ...Read more

A memory of High Wycombe by Hugh Bristow

Jimmy Brown 1925 To Present

My dad Jimmy Brown was born in Greengairs in 1925, he lived with his family in Hill view. He's still going strong and turns 97 next birthday. Is there anyone who knows him as he's the last man standing in his family.

A memory of Greengairs

My Birthplace 1947

I was born here in June 1947. My mother was a Yarlington girl who married a farmers boy from Bratton Seamore. If they had waited one more year perhaps i would have been brought into this world under the new National Health Service!

A memory of Templecombe by Steven Brunt

Mandrake Road

My siblings and I were all born at Weir maternity hospital in Balham, we lived on Mandrake road and we all went to Fircroft primary school opposite our house. I was at Fircroft from 1976-1982. Mr. Chaimings was the headmaster then, Mr ...Read more

A memory of Tooting by Sylvia Amoah

Lost Father

Hi mine is not a memory but wanting to say my birth father was at Blandford Camp he was training to be a physical trainer his name Brian he never knew I existed as he left the camp before he knew my birth mother was pregnant. They ...Read more

A memory of Blandford Camp by Paula Hewes

Growing Up In Queensbury

I was born in Wellington Street on the 16th. of June 1955. My mother was Kate Holland, formerly Henderson. and my father was George E Holland. Sadly he passed away in 1939. So I dont remember very much about him. I had a ...Read more

A memory of Queensbury by Geofftrey Holland

1944

I was born in Romwood Court, Langley Maidstone on 7th March 1944. My Father was in the Royal Engineers serving in France.

A memory of Langley

The Fairway

I was born at 28 The Fairway in 1946. There was (is) a wide grassed area down the centre of the road making it a kind of dual carriageway. In the years following the 2nd World War there were, "Pig bins", on several sections of the grass ...Read more

A memory of Northolt by David Jagger

Captions

137 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.

Caption For Wymondham, The Market Place And Cross C1965

The modern shop fronts in the town hide many old medieval houses.

Caption For Linlithgow, Palace 1897

Situated half-way between Edinburgh and Stirling, Linlithgow became a favourite royal residence, though during the wars with the English it was often under siege or counter-siege.

Caption For Newcastle, High Street C1951

Major-general Thomas Harrison, who served in the Parliamentary army during the Civil War, was born in a house on the High Street.

Caption For Newcastle, High Street 1951

Major-general Thomas Harrison, who served in the Parliamentary army during the Civil War, was born in a house on the High Street.

Caption For Beckbury, The Seven Stars Inn C1965

Beckbury, just a mile or so to the south, can certainly be described as a village, and it still retains its pub, the Seven Stars.

Caption For Winsford, The Blacksmith Bridge And Church C1965

It was at Winsford that Ernest Bevin was born in 1881.

Caption For Sudbury, Friars Street 1895

The street takes its name from the priory of Dominican friars, founded in the 13th century.

Caption For Cookham, High Street 1925

The village main street is little changed, although Bel and the Dragon on the right is no longer also a garage.

Caption For Castletown, College 1897

The distinctive central tower of King William's College was designed by John Welch and was a feature of a major rebuilding programme following a fire in 1844.

Caption For Bethesda, High Street C1955

Bethesda, a village born of slate and the workings of the Penrhyn Quarry, has always had a vibrant community.

Caption For Conistone, 1953

The limestone village of Conistone in Wharfedale is more correctly known as Conistone-with-Kilnsey, with its twin hamlet sheltering under the impressive overhang of Kilnsey Crag across the river.

Caption For Greenock, Union Street 1899

One of the most famous shipyards was that of John Scott, which built the first steamer to trade between Glasgow and Liverpool.

Caption For Denbigh, The Castle 1888

Here we see Victorian children at play in a playground within the castle ruins.

Caption For Broadbridge Heath, Field Place 1923

The poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, eldest son of Sir Timothy Shelley MP, was born on 4 August 1792 at Field Place in Warnham, where he spent his childhood.

Caption For Sandgate, High Street 1903

In the year King Edward VII cut a ribbon to launch London's first electric trams, this small town by the sea still used horses to pull its passenger-laden vehicles.

Caption For Barsham, The Church 1894

The tower is probably Saxon, and was added to an existing nave.

Caption For Fairford, High Street C1955

Like other wool towns in the Cotswolds, such as Stroud, Painswick and Woodchester, Fairford has a 'Rack Hill'.

Caption For Salisbury, Godolphin School 1928

The school was founded in 1726 as an endowed charity school for 'orphan gentlewomen borne of parents of the Church of England'.

Caption For Farndon, St Chad's Church C1960

St Chad's Church in Farndon is one of the few that still carries out a rush-bearing ceremony each year: fresh rushes are brought into the church, and also laid on the paths and graves outside.

Caption For East Barsham, Sheep On The Fakenham Road 1929

The Asshetons, who first became squires here in 1559, have been keen to keep Downham's appearance unspoiled, and in more recent times have had the electric cables buried underground.

Caption For Over, The Square C1965

Although technically a town (it received a charter in 1280), Over never really developed, and in 1894 was recognised as 'the smallest municipality in the country'.

Caption For Kendal, The Castle 1894

Kendal Castle was built by the Normans to the east of the town, probably by Ivo de Tailbois, the first Lord of Kendal in the late 12th century.

Caption For Cheltenham, Montpelier Gardens C1950

The gardens are on the right of the picture; together with the Imperial Gardens, they testify to Cheltenham's love of flowers.

Caption For Laleham, Village 1906

Laleham was a tiny village when Dr Thomas Arnold, soon to be the formidable headmaster of Rugby School, came to live here in Regency times.