Places
18 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Hythe, Kent
- Hythe, Hampshire
- Small Hythe, Kent
- Bablock Hythe, Oxfordshire
- Methwold Hythe, Norfolk
- Hythe, Somerset
- Hythe, Surrey
- Hythe End, Berkshire
- The Hythe, Essex
- Egham Hythe, Surrey
- West Hythe, Kent
- New Hythe, Kent
- Broad Street, Kent (near Hythe)
- Horn Street, Kent (near Hythe)
- Newbarn, Kent (near Hythe)
- Newington, Kent (near Hythe)
- Broad Street, Kent (near Hythe)
- Stone Hill, Kent (near Hythe)
Photos
360 photos found. Showing results 3,061 to 360.
Maps
101 maps found.
Books
10 books found. Showing results 3,673 to 10.
Memories
4,406 memories found. Showing results 1,531 to 1,540.
Days Gone By
This particular photo holds a lot of memories. Tthe bakery on the right hand side was owned by an old lady Mrs Rymes. My friend Di and I thought she was at least 100 years old back then! She used to sit in a chair in the corner of the ...Read more
A memory of Langley in 1959 by
Nurse Emery And Caretaker Collis
I remember Nurse Emery on her pushbike delivering both of my brothers at home. We lived in St Mary's Road, behind the church. I also went to Bishopstoke infants school and was duly frightened by the caretaker, ...Read more
A memory of Bishopstoke in 1964 by
Sandhills/Middle Turn (Commonly Known)
To the left of this picture was a cul-de-sac called Sandhills. My Aunty Grace and uncle and family lived here, so did my mother Margaret Anderson at some stage and later various cousins. Down the bottom to ...Read more
A memory of Spratton in 1958 by
Graham Clive Cale James
Between 1938-1949 I lived in Llanarth Road then at Bryn Road 1949-1959. There was no Springfield Estate (only Springfield Villas, about 6 houses). Tradespeople at that time were Davies the bakers with door to door ...Read more
A memory of Pontllanfraith in 1940 by
Seventh Of The Seventh
All the sevens - the seventh of the seventh of the seventh. 7th July 2007 was the lucky sevens date chosen by Amanda and David for their wedding. Family and friends were invited to The Two Bridges Hotel on Dartmoor for ...Read more
A memory of Two Bridges in 2007 by
Memories
It was in the 50's and I was only a little girl. My grandparents lived across the road in Vine Place. We had a yard and the fair used to put up there each winter. We were always in the hospital, so clean, so nice you never got turned ...Read more
A memory of Hounslow in 1950 by
Templemeads Station
My father was working on Templemeads Station around the time it was bombed, I have the feeling it was a Saturday night in the summer of 1942. I was about four years old and we were lodging in a house by the Avon with a cellar ...Read more
A memory of Bristol in 1940 by
My Wedding Day
I was married in St. Peter's Parish Church, Swinton on September 7th, 1957 - one of the happiest days of my life. It was a lovely sunny day and my best friend May Timperley was my bridesmaid. My husband and I had a honeymoon in St. ...Read more
A memory of Swinton in 1957 by
Cox's Boat Yard
This photo shows Cox's boatyard in late autumn not long after the boat shed on the left had been built. The shed had been part of a wartime camp some where in East Anglia and had been re-erected by the Cox brothers, Lewis and Sonny, complete with American pinups.
A memory of Broads, The by
Captions
4,899 captions found. Showing results 3,673 to 3,696.
The 19th-century lock keeper's cottage with the hipped roof was rebuilt by the Thames Conservancy in 1928.
In the picture, heavy horses wait patiently by the stable while they are prepared for work. On the roofline a builder stands on a scaffolding platform repairing a chimneystack.
The medieval Treasurer's House, owned by the National Trust, is just out of view to the right, beside the creeper-clad house.
Designed by Nathaniel Ireson, who also designed Crowcombe Court in The Quantocks for James Medlycott, it is a most elegant composition framed by the cedars.
Burwell means 'spring by the fort'. It was here at this fen-edge settlement that William the Conqueror and Geoffrey de Manderville made their defensive stand for the island of Ely.
The 14th-century abbey was built on land that once belonged to Abingdon Abbey, and was used as a summer retreat by the monks there.
Wicker baskets carried by the ladies (in the right-hand rowing boat) were very much a feature of life until quite recent times.
The locomotive comes tender-first into Newby Bridge station, where it is awaited by the station master and passengers.
We can see the back of the boat station, with 'cushion huts' peeping out behind the strolling crowds, whilst to the right 'Schneider's gate' is flanked by the bold 'Belsfield Hotel' sign.
The peace and quiet they are obviously enjoying has gone now: it is shattered by the M40 motorway close by.
The warehouse beneath is owned by the London Midland & Scottish Railway Company; one of the boats is mooored close by.
Here lies the old town, whose narrow and crooked streets have been cloaked by the fine sea front.
Amid scenery loved by the author Jane Austen, who was a frequent visitor here when her brother Edward Knight owned the adjoining 560-acre Godmersham Park, the River Stour flows quietly past
The village has mostly limestone buildings; the cedars remain in its churchyard, which is dominated by the pinnacle-topped 15th-century tower.
The caves were formed about 400 million years ago by the rainwater boring through the limestone.
This one was acquired by the council in 1884 for £30,000 from Sir John Ramsden, who personally contributed £5,000. The land was previously part of the Greenhead Hall estate.
The bridge was rebuilt around 1900 by the Aylesbury Urban District Council in purple engineering brick. The building on the far left is the corner of the Nestle's works.
This hamlet is to the south of Boxford and separated from it since 1975 by the bypass.
This small but busy inland port was heavily used by the local mining and quarrying industries.
Burgh Heath is very suburban, and its east side is blighted by the roaring traffic of the dual carriageway A217 Reigate road, which merges with the A23 Brighton road at Horley, south of Redhill
There has been much rebuilding of this part of the High Street, none of it for the better, since the 1950s; continuity has been achieved only by the building at the far left, which is still
Beyond is the Black Prince pub and then a garage, as usual built in a non-Tudor style with white render and flat roofs, influenced by the Modern Movement, to reflect the motor car's different image
He was beheaded by the London mob during the Peasant's Revolt of 1381, and his head is preserved in the vestry.
A lifeboat station was established at Polkerris in 1859, when the first boat was given by the Rashleighs of Menabilly.
Places (18)
Photos (360)
Memories (4406)
Books (10)
Maps (101)