Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Muir Woods, USA
- Wood Green, Greater London
- Paddock Wood, Kent
- Ashurst Wood, Sussex
- Petts Wood, Greater London (near Orpington)
- Hinchley Wood, Surrey
- Bishop's Wood, Hereford & Worcester (near Ross-on-Wye)
- Cousley Wood, Sussex
- Wood's Green, Sussex
- Cannock Wood, Staffordshire
- The Wood, Shropshire (near Wem)
- Wood's Corner, Sussex
- Wood, Dyfed
- Wood, Somerset
- Baker's Wood, Buckinghamshire
- Booth Wood, Yorkshire
- Bishops Wood, Staffordshire
- Prees Wood, Shropshire
- Codsall Wood, Staffordshire
- Gipton Wood, Yorkshire
- Harold Wood, Essex
- Higham Wood, Kent
- Holt Wood, Dorset
- Renshaw Wood, Shropshire
- Ticket Wood, Devon
- Radmore Wood, Staffordshire
- Wollerton Wood, Shropshire
- Wood Bevington, Warwickshire
- Wood End, Hertfordshire
- Wood Green, Norfolk
- Wood Lane, Shropshire
- Wood Norton, Norfolk
- Edzell Woods, Grampian
- Gustard Wood, Hertfordshire
- Lyneal Wood, Shropshire
- Knowl Wood, Yorkshire
Photos
1,098 photos found. Showing results 201 to 220.
Maps
789 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 241 to 4.
Memories
2,407 memories found. Showing results 101 to 110.
Playing In Rainbow Woods
I was born in Combe Down, my parents owned 'Grove Stores' on the end of Hawthorn Grove. I have so many very happy memories of playing in Rainbow Woods, it looks a bit different now obviously, but I can still see it in ...Read more
A memory of Combe Down in 1975 by
Pontypool Town Centre
I lived in Upper Bridge Street and remember a few of the shops in town, I think! On the corner of Upper Bridge Street and the Bell Pitch was Franketti's fish shop with an awesome Art Nouveau till and free chips if you took ...Read more
A memory of Pontypool in 1960 by
Growing Up With The Dinosaurs.
I lived in Thicket Grove which had the Thicket public house at the top. Crystal Palace Park was a very short walk away. During the school holidays we would spend our days in the park. Mum would pack us a picnic ...Read more
A memory of Crystal Palace in 1953 by
A Lovely Place To Grow Up!
I was born in Arnold Avenue, just five minutes walk from the George pub, which was handy later on in my life. Also the post office opposite the pub, which was owned by Mr & Mrs Fit-Simons, who used to have rows of ...Read more
A memory of Meopham in 1956 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
Moving To Prudhoe 1947
We moved to Prudhoe in 1947, I was 12 years old. My dad, Bill Turner RSM, took over the Drill Hall in Swallow Close. I thought it was wonderful as we had relatives in Prudhoe, plus a grandma, Mary Ann Turner. I was born in ...Read more
A memory of Corbridge in 1947 by
Growing Up In Edgware
I was actually born in Bushey but I grew up in Edgware. I always thought it a funny little town but in it's own way it was beautiful. The parks were beautiful and always had Rose Gardens and ponds to visit. Walking was a way ...Read more
A memory of Edgware in 1961 by
Wrens Warren Camp
I'm reading a book. Came upon the name Christopher Wren (astronomer around 1683). Suddenly it slipped into my mind the combination Wrens Warren Camp and via google came upon this site. I'm Dutch, survived the winter of ...Read more
A memory of Colemans Hatch in 1945 by
Childhood Memories We Never Forget
To anyone reading this; I was born Valerie Harding and lived in Wedges Mills and I remember so many things about my childhood in Cannock. The Maypole dancing at John Woods school, attending Church each Thursday ...Read more
A memory of Cannock in 1953 by
Captions
663 captions found. Showing results 241 to 264.
Before Bullenshaw House was built, the area was wooded and provided a natural playground for youngsters. During the war two air-raid shelters were built into the hill.
The wooded estate of Mount Edgecumbe is the hereditary seat of the Earls of Mount Edgecumbe.
But the pond and the wooded nooks around Bonchurch are as great an attraction as they were for the Victorian visitor.
During the medieval period it was undoubtedly extensively wooded, and its name possibly means 'the grazing place of feral stallions'.
A pleasant setting against a backdrop of wooded hills and a gentle coastline with wonderful views to the southern Lakes helped establish Silverdale as a quietly fashionable medicinal sea-bathing resort
The No 142 bus, advertising Kent Life magazine, is bound for Weeds Wood via Huntsman's Corner.
Its name is believed to have come from the appearance of charcoal workers as they emerged from working in the woods.
But the pond and the wooded nooks around Bonchurch are as great an attraction as they were for the Victorian visitor.
It lies in a wooded vale below desolate moorland, the source of the River Barle.
By the 1650s Lionel Copley had become one of the leading ironmasters in South Yorkshire, thanks to a leasing arrangement with the Earl of Shrewsbury which gave him access to Shrewsbury charcoal woods
We are standing on Winckford Bridge across the Chelmer - described by Peter Muilman in his 1769 'History of Essex' as “a handsome bridge built of wood, painted.”
The proprietor, F York Jones, used to advertise proudly that Cofton Wood Tea Room had 'special arrangements for supplying jugs of tea without waiting, even on the busiest days.'
By the 1920s, Fittleworth had become an artists' mecca owing to its pretty woods, its fine views from its commons, its quaint architecture and, it has been suggested, the warm welcome offered at the Swan
This wooded hill in the town centre is topped by the ruins of a Norman castle, whose builders might not be entirely surprised to find that the outer bailey now houses a zoo: after all, exotic animals were
Luccombe village itself is seen here against the backdrop of the wooded Horner Hill in a view taken from Knowle Top.
The school has been converted into a house by the architect Robert Wood.
The village is certainly one of Devon's prettiest, not least for its setting, strung in a series of hamlets around the junction of several pastoral and wooded combes.
They took their power from the Roeburn and Hindburn, and served several industries that included nail-making, hatting, wood-turning and sawing.
Highly-coloured and gilded walls and ceilings, tiled floors and exotic wood help to make it a romantic Victorian fantasy.
Note the unmarked roads, the shops on the left (D H Davies and M Woods) and the various forms of traffic (there are bicycles and motor cars, and a bus on the left).
This is still a distinct village, with lanes winding uphill, although the wall on the right has now been replaced by a 1970s close, Titan Barrow, the name perpetuating a house of 1748 by Wood the Elder
The wooded ravine of Nicky Nook draws botanists and sketchers.
Benfleet's wooded hills once provided vital material for fuel and boat-building.
Chapel Common has a quaint 16th-century chapel in a wood, with a new church of St Luke built nearby in 1878.
Places (165)
Photos (1098)
Memories (2407)
Books (4)
Maps (789)