Maps

517 maps found.

Books

26 books found. Showing results 3,193 to 3,216.

Memories

4,713 memories found. Showing results 1,331 to 1,340.

Schooldays In The 40s And 50s

I was born during the Second World War in 1942, the 8th child to my parents at Goose Bridge, Matching Green. My parents were Scottish and people thought they were foreign. My dad worked for Mr Gemmill's farm ...Read more

A memory of Matching Green by Mary Burton

Ron Pat Shelton 1977 To 1981

In 1977, my late husband, Ron. and I moved from Melbourne, Australia into 28 Stoke Lyne at the end of the village. It was very dilapidated, consisting originally 2 workman's cottages. They had been converted to one ...Read more

A memory of Stoke Lyne in 1977 by Pat Shelton Astley

Beautiful Quiet Abercych.

I was born in Abercych in 1930 but went to Swansea in 1934. When I qualified as a pharmacist in 1952 I went abroad to work, in Central Africa (N. Rhodesia and then Nyasaland) then the Gilbert & Ellice Islads in the ...Read more

A memory of Parrog in 1930 by Thomas Davies

Mucky Duck And The Bugle Horn

I used to pedal my service-issue bike from RAF Swinderby to the village to meet friends I made there at the Bugle Horn for a couple of hours every month, and have a few with my service colleagues from the flight ...Read more

A memory of Bassingham in 1962 by Keith Bell

Dinner Ladies At Bulphan School

The dinner ladies deserve a mention, Miss Went and Mrs Thomas, they looked after us kids and I believe that Roy Thomas is still in the village. The photo from Friths is just how it was - well done. Adrian Vidler

A memory of Bulphan in 1956 by Adrian Vidler

Troedy Best Place In The World To Grow Up

1953, my first day of school, holding hands with Brian Brown going down the street to the bottom gate of school was my first real memory of Troedy. We all took care of each other those days, we ...Read more

A memory of Troedrhiwfuwch in 1953 by Jennifer Jenkins

Wartime Boyhood

i grew up in Chiseldon in the Second World War. In those days, Chiseldon was spelt Chisledon. I lived in Hodson Road and attended the then primary school opposite the Patriots Arms. The two teachers were Mrs. Bullock and Mrs. ...Read more

A memory of Chiseldon in 1940 by Tony Eggleton

My Home

The White Hart was my home for many years until I married. My father and mother managed the White Hart for over 25 years and are both at rest now in Cheadle parish church. I have seen many changes both in the village and the ...Read more

A memory of Cheadle in 1960 by Sylvia Holyoake

Happy Days

Our second son, Sam, was born very shortly after we moved to Thrussington from Kent in 1972. We'll never forget the kindness and support shown to us by people in the village where we had only been for three weeks. The following ...Read more

A memory of Thrussington in 1972 by Martin Johnson

Information Photographs

I am researching the village of Grayingham in Lincolnshire and would be interested to receive any information, pictures, of weddings, etc or of people of the village.

A memory of Grayingham by Cressida Marshall

Captions

5,033 captions found. Showing results 3,193 to 3,216.

Caption For Uley, Green And Church 1904

This view looks down the hill into the village. The Old Crown Inn and the adjoining cottages are faced by the Georgian houses on the other side of the green.

Caption For West End, Village Stores C1955

Then came houses and shops to create today's village on either side of the A322. Two of its close neighbouring communities have the unusual names of Penny Pot and Donkey Town.

Caption For Llangattock, Church 1898

The village was an important centre for weaving, but is now more famous for white water canoeing.

Caption For Horndon On The Hill, The High Street C1960

To the right of them lies Swan Meadow, once home to the village fair. This event survives as Horndon-on-the-Hill Feast & Fayre, which takes place at the end of June, to mark St Peter's Day.

Caption For Bebington, Teehey Lane 1950

The town owes much to the Victorian jeweller Joseph Mayer, who gave his home village a little library in Mayer Hall in 1866.

Caption For Port Sunlight, Hulme Hall C1965

During the evening it doubled as the village hall. During the First World War it served as a military hospital for wounded soldiers.

Caption For Buntingford, High Street C1955

Buntingford was founded in the 1100s and served as a market for the surrounding villages and communities, particularly the settlement at the adjacent Layston.

Caption For Dolphinholme, Church Corner C1955

In 1811, the village and factory were amongst the first to be lit by gas, and in 1822 the mill was converted to steam.

Caption For Hornby, The Castle Hotel C1965

During the 18th century, the village was a halt for stage coaches travelling between Lancaster and Kirkby Lonsdale.

Caption For Lower Heysham, Main Street C1965

Growing from a small fishing village to an unpretentious resort during the middle of the 19th century, Lower Heysham has retained its 'olde world' atmosphere.

Caption For Cley, Windmill 1933

This picturesque flint village was once the most significant of the Glaven estuary ports, and its old Custom House bears testimony to its prestigious past.

Caption For Bursledon, The Village C1960

Bursledon village consists of two distinct halves—the new and the old.

Caption For Fittleworth, Upper Street 1921

A mile or so to the north of the village is a house where Edward Elgar spent his summers between 1917 and 1921.

Caption For Buckden, High Street C1955

This is the heart of the village, with the George Inn (left) and the Lion Hotel, both former coaching inns, standing opposite each other.

Caption For Grantchester, The Rose And Crown C1965

The change in name reflects the growing interest in Rupert Brooke, the First World War poet from this village.

Caption For Wicken, The Pond C1955

We continue on to the village pond, which now has a fringe of sedge and reeds and is home to many coot, duck and moorhen. The old thatched house on the left was replaced in 1959 by a modern house.

Caption For Thurlstone, The Post Office C1965

One famous 18th-century villager was Nicholas Sanderson.

Caption For Wethersfield, Dog Inn C1965

The village doctor once had his surgery at the Hall, though his patients disliked passing the graveyard whenever they visited him. Today, the ivy has really taken hold of the gate-piers.

Caption For St Austell, Duporth Beach 1912

There are now houses and the Duporth Holiday Village along the slopes behind.

Caption For Stoneleigh, Birmingham Road C1960

Today, as might be expected from somewhere which boasts both a Birmingham Road and a Coventry Road, it is largely a commuter village.

Caption For Eccleston, The Pump And Church C1955

This village's name means 'the settlement by the church', possibly in this case a church that was first founded i pre-Saxon times. Here we see the present church partially hidden amongst the trees.

Caption For Mapledurham, The Mill 1890

Mapledurham, with its great Tudor mansion and unchanged village, is one of Oxfordshire's most picturesque and historic ones.

Caption For Earley, St Peter's Church 1910

Leaving the villages along the river, we move inland south to Earley, now very much part of Reading. In 1910 Church Road was a country lane still.

Caption For Chipstead, The Pond C1960

Elmore Cottages still command the High Road opposite the village pond and crossroads but have been extended on the south side where the fence on the flint wall has been removed.