Maps

517 maps found.

Books

26 books found. Showing results 2,617 to 2,640.

Memories

4,713 memories found. Showing results 1,091 to 1,100.

Born & Bred In Aberfan

I was born in 1937 and with the outbreak of WWII lived with my grandparents, Ollie and Maggi Owen, at 29 Cottrell Street, Aberfan, while my father served in the army. My parents were Roy and Ada Taylor, and after the war my ...Read more

A memory of Aberfan in 1950 by Alan Taylor

Blackmill

My name is Beth McMillan - Mckay then. Now living in New Zealand. We lived in Glyn-Llan but I spent many a hour walking up and down that road to Blackmill, getting the shopping in the Co-op and little shop/post-office on the corner. ...Read more

A memory of Blackmill by Beth Mc Millan

Highgate Village In The 1960s

What I am most interested in writing about is how Highgate Village has changed so much since my school days, growing up there in the 1960s. Today most of the shops are coffee shops, ...Read more

A memory of Highgate in 1965 by Robert Molesworth

The Amazing Vaughan Family

Stan and Helen Vaughan met me at the Leicester Train station after my long journey from California. I had won a Rotary International Scholarship and the Vaughans were my host family. I was a scared young girl and I ...Read more

A memory of Desford in 1986 by Donna Rose Houchen

Mr. Stevens

Does anyone remember Mr. Stevens? He used to keep the village tidy; always sweeping the roadside. He had a daughter Betty who I would love to know of her whereabouts as she was a friend of mine when we went to Perins school ...Read more

A memory of Cheriton in 1955 by Marian Plummer

Does Anyone Know Eddie

Hi I used to go to Easington Technical college at Peterlee between 1967-1969 doing a secretarial course for two years. During this time the mining lads used to come along and there was a guy from Witton Gilbert called ...Read more

A memory of Langley Park in 1969

Happy Youth

I first found out about when I moved to Great Horton in Bradford about 1952. I met a boy called Philip Tempest who lived in a house near by, we became life long friends. His parent took me on holiday with them to a cottage they owned ...Read more

A memory of Nesfield in 1950 by Donald Rumbold

The Gardens Remembered

I am puzzled as to which year this photo was taken. It must have been very late fifties because my earliest memory of The Rest Garden, as we called it, was when it was still recognizeable as a graveyard. The gravestones ...Read more

A memory of Uxbridge by Philip Cousins

My Earliest Kilmacolm Memory

I must have been lying in my pram as my oldest memory is of seeing a large formation of planes flying overhead. Some years later, it must have been a very hot summer's day, a convoy of trucks passed by with the ...Read more

A memory of Kilmacolm in 1945 by Robin Meldrum

Sec Mod School

Does anyone remember the school opening in 1957 (I think), everyone was a little bewildered as to where our classrooms were. Mr. (Chalky) White was headmaster. I recall Mr. Stewart (history), Mr. Palmer (Geography), Mrs ...Read more

A memory of Stoke's Hall by Audrey Pamplin

Captions

5,033 captions found. Showing results 2,617 to 2,640.

Caption For Nutfield, The Village C1955

Some of the buildings in the village are built from a grey stone quarried from the fuller's earth pits.

Caption For Hermitage, Post Office And Hermitage Road C1960

Today the speed limit through the village is thirty miles per hour, not forty. Lyons Cakes and Brooke Bond Tea are among the items advertised outside the shop.

Caption For Bulphan, The School C1955

Bulphan was always a smallish village. According to a directory of 1899, it then consisted of a post office, a blacksmith, a grocery shop, a bakery-cum-beer shop, and a few farms.

Caption For Hazelbury Bryan, The Post Office C1955

This village sprawls around the lanes of the surrounding countryside of the Blackmoor Vale as though not quite sure where it wants to be.

Caption For West Lulworth, The Village 1903

The village street curves around the foot of Bindon Hill as it approaches the cove, with the Cove Hotel next to the thatched cottages on the left.

Caption For Bembridge, The Old Windmill C1955

The nearby quarries - and much of Binstead's villagers must have worked in them when they were active - provided the stone for the cathedrals at Chichester and Winchester.

Caption For Calbourne, Winkle Street C1955

The pretty village of Calbourne lies among the downlands of the Isle of Wight. Its lovely Early English church boasts many fine monuments and is among the oldest on the Island.

Caption For Pembridge, Red Lion Corner C1965

The survival of so many timber buildings is a reminder that by the 17th and 18th centuries, the village's fortunes had declined.

Caption For Hazelbury Bryan, The Post Office C1955

This village sprawls around the lanes of the surrounding countryside of the Blackmoor Vale as though not quite sure where it wants to be.

Caption For Connemara, Roundstone C1955

The many bays and inlets of Connemara are dotted with little harbours and villages. One of the largest is Roundstone, situated on the coast road between Recess and Clifden.

Caption For Newton Abbot, St Leonard's Tower 1906

It now forms a centrepiece to this busy market town, familiar to the many local people who come to shop each week from dozens of surrounding towns and villages.

Caption For Beer, East Cliff 1907

To the west of the village is a labyrinth of man-made caverns from which the stone for Exeter Cathedral was taken. The Quarry Caves are now an exciting tourist attraction.

Caption For Runswick, The Village 1927

The road leading up the cliff from the village looks a steep, arduous walk. To the far left of the road, a lone camper has pitched a tent on a piece of grassy land.

Caption For Staintondale, The Village C1960

As payment, the villagers were exempt from market and road tolls.

Caption For Devizes, Estcourt Street C1955

In spite of the cars, it has a village feel to it, with pedestrians and cyclists unaffected by traffic. The British Lion public house next to the Estcourt Dairy is early 18th-century.

Caption For Slad, The Valley 1910

The village and countryside around inspired his most famous book, 'Cider with Rosie'. Upon visiting, one can easily see the reason for such inspirational writing.

Caption For Widecombe In The Moor, At The Village Sign 1927

Although surrounded by a patchwork of fields, Widecombe is a real moorland village, and the skyline is dominated by the tors: centre right is Bonehill Rocks, to the left is Bell Tor and on the

Caption For Marske, Village 1913

Marske is an attractive and unusual Swaledale village, neither nuclear nor linear, nestling in a fold of hills just above the River Swale.

Ref. B647017
Caption For Burley, C1955

He acquired fame and affection for the mouth-watering tea-parties he gave for local villagers, children and New Forest gypsies.

Caption For Low Row, The Punch Bowl Inn C1960

Low Row is one of several pretty villages which mark the length of Swaledale, many people's favourite among the Yorkshire Dales, with its spectacular scenery and long history of lead mining.

Caption For Pluckley, The Square C1955

Standing on a steep hillside north-west of Ashford, and with commanding views of the Weald, this charming village was near the seat of the Dering family.

Caption For Weybourne, The Village C1955

The village is dominated by the parish church with its 15th-century flint tower; it is surrounded by the ruins of the priory founded here in the time of King John by Sir Ralph Mainwaring.

Caption For Burton Bradstock, 1897

One of the attractions of England's villages is how each one seems to play a part in the greater history of these islands.

Caption For Abbotsbury, The Village C1955

Dorset villages such as Abbotsbury had changed little since the days of Thomas Hardy until the middle of the last century, when farming practices changed and tourism increased.