Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Ottery St Mary, Devon
- St Mary's, Isles of Scilly
- Holmbury St Mary, Surrey
- St Mary's Bay, Kent (near New Romney)
- Port St Mary, Isle of Man
- St Mary Bourne, Hampshire
- Buckland St Mary, Somerset
- Tedburn St Mary, Devon
- Chadwell St Mary, Essex
- Week St Mary, Cornwall
- Wisbech St Mary, Cambridgeshire
- St Mary Cray, Greater London
- Trimley St Mary, Suffolk
- Seavington St Mary, Somerset
- St Mary's Platt, Kent
- Rockland St Mary, Norfolk
- Adhurst St Mary, Hampshire
- Down St Mary, Devon
- Bow, Devon (near Down St Mary)
- Kingston St Mary, Somerset
- Donhead St Mary, Wiltshire
- Stoke St Mary, Somerset
- St Mary's, Northumberland
- Lowton St Mary's, Greater Manchester
- Ramsey St Mary's, Cambridgeshire
- St Mary's, Isle of Man
- St Mary's, Orkney Islands
- Codford St Mary, Wiltshire
- Creeting St Mary, Suffolk
- Collaton St Mary, Devon
- Pulham St Mary, Norfolk
- Hinton St Mary, Dorset
- Stratford St Mary, Suffolk
- Blandford St Mary, Dorset
- Clyst St Mary, Devon
- St Mary Hoo, Kent
Photos
4,838 photos found. Showing results 201 to 220.
Maps
302 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
660 memories found. Showing results 101 to 110.
The Gloster Arms
I was largely brought up in Mariner's Square. Directly opposite the Mariner's Hotel (the building with the portico) was a pub called the Gloster Arms. At the time this picture was taken it was run by my great grandmother and ...Read more
A memory of Haverfordwest in 1965
Why Was I Here?
I remember being sent to St Mary's Home when I was about 7 years old, I was taken by train, I can't remember by who, I was sent there because I was a sickly child, all due to not having enough food to eat at home, where things ...Read more
A memory of Broadstairs in 1953
Kitkburton Primary School
I attended Kirkburton First School (School Hill), prior to this I was sent to a Catholic school in Huddersfield, although living in Burton at the time, there was no comparison, Kirkburton School was like heaven ...Read more
A memory of Kirkburton in 1958 by
Growing Up In Fordingbridge
I grew up in Fordingbridge between 1949 when I was born and 1967 when I left for University. I have so many memories that I couldn't possibly put them all down here, so I am just selecting a few good or striking ...Read more
A memory of Fordingbridge in 1960
St Marys
Just an up-date to my previous memory. I wonder if anybody remembers St Mary's Church just down the road from Valence Wood Road. I was a choirboy there for a numbers of years in the late forties - early fifties. I was married there on Oct 1st. 1955. Alan Gammans
A memory of Dagenham in 1955 by
Family History
My grandparents were married in St. Marys church in 1906 at that time my grand mother lived on Long St. with her family her maiden was Coates and her mothers maiden was Gowland and at some time in the past the Gowlands ran the Cross keys.
A memory of Thirsk by
My Memory Of Chopwell
After reading the other accounts of Chopwell I decided to add my own, I hope I have got the names and dates right as I am doing this from memory, apologies if I get some of it wrong. All my mother’s side of the family were from ...Read more
A memory of Chopwell by
The 'cleopatra Restaurant' Next To The Northwood Hills Hotel, Elton John, Bluesology And 'toys And Sports'.
Seeing the photo of the 'Northwood Hills Hotel' and the tall 'office' building beyond, took me back to recall 'The Cleopatra Restaurant' that ...Read more
A memory of Northwood Hills by
Early Days
Born in 1939, lived in Lansdowne Grove, House destroyed by German bomb I was buried in rubble. Moved away to Blackpool returned to Heron Road Willesden 1947. Made very few friends, Names remembered are Owen family, Syd West Jack ...Read more
A memory of Willesden by
Captions
842 captions found. Showing results 241 to 264.
Once the port for Canterbury, Fordwich was a town when Domesday was compiled.
Little has changed since picture No 33024 was taken, save for the building of a lifeboat station.
The church of St Mary saw many changes in the late 1800s.
Taken from outside St Mary of the Angels, the village's Catholic church, this view looks along The Nook past 17th- and early 18th-century houses.
The church building in the distance is St Mary's, whose north wall still carries scars said to be of a lesser civil war skirmish fought here.
This view of the square shows how it had been broken up, so to speak, and had lost the impression of openness.
It was to Port St Mary that the Scottish granite to be used in the construction of Chicken Rock Lighthouse was brought, and where each stone was cut and dressed to size before being taken out to the site
St Mary's Church dates from the 15th century, though much of the present building is a reconstruction by John James, after the original church fell down in 1713.
Bottesford is tucked away in the far north-eastern corner of Leicestershire, in the middle of the magnificent Vale of Belvoir.
The Priory Church of St Mary and St Michael was never elevated to abbey status.
It was built by the powerful cutlers, who were active in the town in the 14th and 15th centuries.
The big tree in St Mary's churchyard has gone, and the wall has been rebuilt further back from the pavement.
Looking down Market Street towards St Mary's with the spire of St Martin's just visible beyond.
At this time Port St Mary was still being described as a 'pleasant little fishing port and seaside resort'.
Just visible on the right of the picture is Andover's 19th-century church of St Mary, built in the Early English style by a former headmaster of Winchester College and described as the best
As large as a cathedral and one of only two parish churches in England to have stone vaulting, St Mary's was built on a grand scale, thanks to the generosity of Bristol merchants.
The village has long been famous for Basing House, a ruined building reduced to rubble by Cromwell and his army during the Civil War.
Having survived the great fire of 1583, St Mary's Church is the oldest building in the town.
Near the River Ouse, situated in what is now the Museum Gardens, this building was the guest house for St Mary's Abbey.The ground floor was built in the early 14th century, while the timber-framed
The church in the distance is that of St Mary, built in 1833.
The parish church of St Mary dates from about 1141, though much restoration work was carried out during the Victorian era.
Cartmel has been described as a cathedral city in miniature.
Lying two hundred yards south-west of St Mary's the chapel is a small church built by Earl Odda and dedicated to the Holy Trinity in April 1056.
Advertising has always existed, though today it is controlled by the local authority.
Places (68)
Photos (4838)
Memories (660)
Books (0)
Maps (302)