Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Places
2 places found.
Did you mean: butter ?
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
123 photos found. Showing results 221 to 123.
Maps
13 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,367 memories found. Showing results 111 to 120.
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
Cissiess Memories
Cissie's memories: I came to Barry in 1900. Holton Road was muddy and planks of wood were put down to enter the shops. We had a shop in 26 Holton Road, and later at the bottom of the block on spare ground Johnson's opened a ...Read more
A memory of Barry in 1900
Mobo Horses
We moved to Prestatyn in 1948. I loved the Mobo horses that the little ones could ride at the Bastion Road beach. My little school was Pendre, up the hill Fforddlas I think. Also going to St Chad's School annual fair and sale. Always ...Read more
A memory of Prestatyn in 1950 by
Button Oak
I lived in Button Oak during 1942/43 and worked in the Wyre Forest for 'Bob' Harris who was the Forester. Along with two of my mates, Denis Mills and Hubert Till, I made frequent trips into Bewdley to go to the pictures or get my hair ...Read more
A memory of Bewdley in 1940 by
Priory Road 1962 To 1988
My father, William J Smith (Bill) had a newsagent at 47 Priory Road between 1962 and 1988 which was opposite Ports the Bakers. I remember seeing queues of people coming out of the Bakers on a Saturday morning to get ...Read more
A memory of South Park in 1970 by
Childhood On Osborne Terrace
In 1949 the houses on Osborne Terrace were just being built, as soon as they were coming available the council were moving people in, our family moved into no 21. I was 4 years old. It was a lovely place then, nice ...Read more
A memory of Stacksteads in 1950 by
High Street Longton In The 40s And 50s
Barbara Johnson's memories brought back some of my own from the High Street days. Those rows of shops Barbara describes provided all the locals with everything they needed. I remember going over the road from ...Read more
A memory of Longton in 1940 by
Court Crescent Junior School And Wellinger Way
I was born at my Grandmother's home at No: 50 Hand Avenue on the Braunstone Estate. When I was about 3 we moved from Grandma's to our own home at No: 9 Wellinger Way. I went to Queensmead ...Read more
A memory of Braunstone Town by
Cookridge Once Fields And Farms
I moved from Holbeck in 1948 into one of the first estates to be built in North West Leeds, Ireland Wood (Raynels). In 1950 I went to Cookridge School, then a wooden hut right slap bang opposite where Cookridge ...Read more
A memory of Cookridge in 1950 by
Captions
311 captions found. Showing results 265 to 288.
The thatched cottage was used by Spurgeon the butcher and then by Mace the cobbler; it is now a florist's.
On the left, next to the Lloyd's Bank branch, is the fashion shop of Renee Shaw, with Fuller's tea shop, Dewhurst's the butcher's, and John's menswear shop further down the hill.
Clark's of Retford next door have been replaced by Mellor's, a local butcher. R L Kisby and the Trustee Savings Bank (right) have gone, and Mills the newsagents have taken their place.
On the left, the rounded brick building is now part of Hollingsworth's butcher's shop. A sign at Inglenook shows it to have been a café; beyond is The Foresters' Arms.
The white building (right) was the village butcher's shop - joints of meat were hung from the trees; beyond it is the three-gabled Town House.
Down the slope is the sign of the Royal Oak Hotel (above the hand-cart) and the shop window of butchers W and R Fletcher Ltd (two ladies passing), with a painter on a ladder further down the hill.
On the opposite side of the street a man carrying a suitcase passes in front of the doors of the fire station, next to the tiled butcher and fishmonger's shop run by Mr F Savage.
Ancillary businesses included a newsagent, a butcher, a baker and the post office (where the white van is parked), as well as the builder R O Ayres, who proudly advertises his telephone number on his
At number 68, on the extreme left, Grimmond's Bakery and teashop is now visible, but Luxford's has become Eastman's the butchers, losing the lovely stained glass decoration from its plain frontage.
It is now owned by Dewhurst the butcher, and apart from a rather more modern frontage, survives intact.
The only real change today is that the brick building just to the right of the two cars, which was home to a butcher's shop, was demolished in the early 1970s to widen the entrance to Water Street.
The bus queue to Swindon is forming by the two lime trees outside Ashman's butchers shop, today a private house.
The house with the butcher's shop on the right was demolished in the 1960s for road improvement.
On the left is Andrew Dale Jackson's glass, china and general stores, with a butcher's shop beside it.
Two ladies are passing the shop window of butchers W and R Fletcher Limited, and a painter is up the ladder further down the hill.
The sides of meat in the window serve to underline the fact that it continued to operate as a butcher's shop into the 1950s.
On the left, standing proudly above the other roofs, is Fisher's butchers shop. In 1881, Francis Fisher had the cottages on the site demolished and erected this imposing new shop.
In the photograph, a butcher's shop front (left) with its rather flimsy canopy has been built into a rather good 17th- century cottage.
The only real change today is that the brick building just to the right of the two cars, which was home to a butcher's shop, was demolished in the early 1970s to widen the entrance to Water Street
In the photograph, a butcher's shop front (left) with its rather flimsy canopy has been built into a rather good 17th- century cottage.
A string of itinerant tradesmen called: butcher, tinker, tailor, fishmonger, and muffin man.
Just a few of the favourites that have gone include include Kingston's the butcher's, Taylor's department store, the Army and Navy department store, Fine Fare supermarket, J Sainsbury (relocated
Heron was butchered in the traditional Border fashion; the only other fatality was one Robert Atkinson.
Tommy Dennis's butcher's shop (centre right) was renowned for its ornate topiary and for the life-like bull's head mounted on the board across the building.
Places (2)
Photos (123)
Memories (1367)
Books (0)
Maps (13)