Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Bury, Greater Manchester
- Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
- Ramsbottom, Greater Manchester
- Prestwich, Greater Manchester
- Radcliffe, Greater Manchester
- Whitefield, Greater Manchester
- Bury, Sussex
- Tottington, Greater Manchester
- Holcombe, Greater Manchester
- Bury's Bank, Berkshire
- Bury, Cambridgeshire
- Black Lane, Greater Manchester
- Chesham, Greater Manchester
- Fairfield, Greater Manchester (near Bury)
- Four Lane Ends, Greater Manchester
- Rainsough, Greater Manchester
- Limefield, Greater Manchester
- Starling, Greater Manchester
- Walshaw, Greater Manchester
- Besses o' th' Barn, Greater Manchester
- Ainsworth, Greater Manchester
- Elton, Greater Manchester
- Gigg, Greater Manchester
- Pimhole, Greater Manchester
- Holcombe Brook, Greater Manchester
- Hawkshaw, Greater Manchester
- Nuttall, Greater Manchester
- Unsworth, Greater Manchester
- Affetside, Greater Manchester
- Hollins, Greater Manchester (near Bury)
- Jericho, Greater Manchester
- Oak Bank, Greater Manchester
- Nangreaves, Greater Manchester
- Summerseat, Greater Manchester
- Bury, Somerset
- Blackford Bridge, Greater Manchester
Photos
481 photos found. Showing results 221 to 240.
Maps
357 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 265 to 4.
Memories
964 memories found. Showing results 111 to 120.
Two Of My Uncles Memorailzed On Obelisk At Wooburn Green
My grandfather was GM of Glory Mill in the early 1900s. My father and his siblings were raised in a house located on the grounds. There were four brothers and all served in the British ...Read more
A memory of Wooburn Green in 1920 by
Flying Man Of Pocklington
I remember going to Pocklington, in the effort to find family from our family tree. We went to Bishop Wilton. But, in browsing in Pocklington, we found out about the Flying Man of Pocklington. He said he could fly, and ...Read more
A memory of Pocklington in 1973 by
Ladd Family 1878
My grandfather Ernest Ladd, born Eastry 1878, is buried in the churchyard. Although as a child when visiting my grandmother we would tend the grave and put flowers on it, I only have a vague recollection of its location. My mother ...Read more
A memory of Eastry in 1950 by
Flimby
I cannot remember a time where Flimby did not feature in my life. My father was born on Ryehill Road, and my grandfather was born and bred in Flimby. It once was a pit village and my grandfather John Watters was an engineer, his father was ...Read more
A memory of Flimby by
Escrick Park Gardens Market Gardens 1950 1966
My aunt and uncle - Mr and Mrs George Pratt - used to manage the market gardens in Escrick. We had many happy holidays there, and I remember the peaches and apricots growing up the wall, rows and rows ...Read more
A memory of Escrick in 1950 by
Grandfathers Grave
As a child my father frequently told me that his father was buried next to John Peel in Caldbeck graveyard. I now live in Australia, but in 1997 I visited Caldbeck hoping to see my grandfather's grave. Unfortunately it was not ...Read more
A memory of Caldbeck in 1997 by
Where Does The Time Go
This is the church where my 17 year old son was christened. This is also the church where I spent most of my childhood. From about the age of 10, my friends and I would go grave rubbing. We actually spent more time cleaning ...Read more
A memory of Farndon in 1980 by
The Hub Of My Young Universe
London's main railway stations truly are wonderful and Charing Cross was the one that I frequented the most as I travelled every weekday from Woolwich Arsenal in SE London to Green Park Underground, near the great ...Read more
A memory of London in 1959 by
Church Choir
I think it was about 1959 when a new Vicar arrived in the village of Yapton he was the Rev. Nelson. I was 12 at the time, His wife who we only knew as Mrs Nelson decided to start a church choir. So with a few of my cousins and girls I ...Read more
A memory of Yapton in 1959 by
Calceby My Soul Mate
Calceby... I came to live here in 1947, not a country girl by birth, having lived in Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire, for the first fourteen years of my life. This hamlet was to become my home for the next three years, isolated ...Read more
A memory of Calceby in 1947 by
Captions
367 captions found. Showing results 265 to 288.
Baily's family turned down an offer to have him buried in Westminster Abbey when he died in 1844.
Nowadays it is more trendily named Rickmansworth Aquadrome, now incorporating Bury Lake which is used for swimming and Batchworth for water sports, including sailing and water skiing.
Robert Burns came to the town in 1791 and lived with his wife and family in a house in Millhole Brae.
Nearer the camera is the bell turret of the old Market Hall, and beyond on the other side of the valley is the tower and spire of the parish church and to its left, beyond the cedar tree, is The Bury,
after Victoria Bridge, built to span a tidal creek that ran across the line of Bolton Road; the bridge thus linked Bolton Road to the New Chester Road (the creek was eventually filled in and the bridge buried
Perhaps modern road improvements have either scared it away or buried it altogether.
is just a village, though a large one; it is always high on the best-kept village awards list, a title which it has won in the past.The last Abbot of Whalley, a Cistercian monk, is thought to be buried
Anthony Trollope, the Victorian novelist, lived in the village for many years and is buried here.
Elihu Yale, founder of Yale University in the USA, came from the Wrexham area (his family was associated with Erddig Hall), and he is buried at St Giles's church.
He his buried in the family vault at Ormskirk.
Internally, the building lacks any quality monuments, apart from a brass plate commemorating Margaret Bury, who died in 1633.
The landscape designer Lancelot `Capability` Brown is buried here at Fenstanton with his wife and children.
Part of the courtyard below was used to bury victims who were hung publicly outside the castle walls.
Today they have gone; beneath the towpath, fibre optic cables are now buried – today's version of another kind of communication.
Until 1948 the hospital was voluntary, and wards were named after local benefactors such as Bristol (of Ickworth), Praed (of Ousden) and Hasted (of Bury).
Bury is one of the most thriving traditional markets in England.
Today they have gone; beneath the towpath, fibre optic cables are now buried – today's version of another kind of communication.
Elihu Yale, founder of Yale University in the USA, came from the Wrexham area (his family was associated with Erddig Hall), and he is buried at St Giles's church.
In the graveyard are stones bearing indications of the profession of the person buried beneath, such as a violin or books.
From Newstead Abbey the route heads four miles south to Hucknall, which also has Byronic associations: in this church Byron was buried in the family vault after his body had been brought home from Greece
Records show that one vicar buried eleven plague victims - he himself died from plague the next month.
Walmersley was a township within Bury on the east bank of the Irwell.
On the left is the base of the stepped 14th-century cross, which retains the eroded arms of the de Roos family, a number of whom are buried in the church, including Robert de Roos (1285
On the left is the base of the stepped 14th-century cross, which retains the eroded arms of the de Roos family, a number of whom are buried in the church, including Robert de Roos (1285
Places (77)
Photos (481)
Memories (964)
Books (4)
Maps (357)