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

4 places found.

Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Photos

88 photos found. Showing results 301 to 88.

Maps

70 maps found.

Books

Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.

Memories

713 memories found. Showing results 151 to 160.

Memory For Ewell 1945 55

Down Beggers Hill and round the bend, just a short distance from the Jolly Wagoners and next to the Eight Bells, there was a blacksmiths who used a furnace to shape the iron shoes that were used to shoe horses. The horses ...Read more

A memory of Ewell by Patricia Dickson

Pill Bicycle Shop

My maternal grandfather, Allan Henry Ball, had a bicycle shop in Pill prior to the Second World War. My mother had a photo of herself as a child outside the shop (in the 1920s). I believe that both my grandfather and his wife were ...Read more

A memory of Pill in 1940 by Peter Guala

1951 1955

Tree climbing was good fun in very large trees till it was banned when David Nash fell and hurt his back for a couple of days. Alarge tree opposite the headmaster's office had iron rungs to a top platform used for spotting approaching ...Read more

A memory of Thelwall in 1954 by Brian Parker

The Foundry

The smell that came from the foundry... I used to go see my dad and the cold damp stench used to burn your eyes and fill your lungs. The building was cold and damp and yet the heat from the ladles of molten iron would burn your ...Read more

A memory of Auchtermuchty by Kathleen Litts Dean

Farming From Horses To Electronics

My grandfather G. A. Smith took the tenancy of Springs Farm on Edingley Moor in 1931, when I was six months old. A builder by trade, and a sergeant in the Sherwood Rangers Yeomanry during the First World War, he ...Read more

A memory of Edingley in 1930 by John Watts

Son Of Sgt Bruce Krrc

My father was stationed at Chisledon Camp from 1939 to 1942. Living in Littlehampton on the south coast, threatened with invasion, my mother rented the end thatched cottage of the row of cottages which face the railway line ...Read more

A memory of Chiseldon in 1940 by Glenister Bruce

Secret Garden In Spencer Park

I lived in a prefab in Spencer Park. There is a secret garden in the middle of Spencer Park, the iron gate entrance is just off Windmill Road. We used climb into this garden to go scrumping soft fruit. We were ...Read more

A memory of Wandsworth in 1950 by Thomas Marriott

Cranborne

I was a pupil at Cranborne First School at the time of Ms Rogers and lived across the carpark at 9 Water Street. I remember ending up with prizes for cooking and mini garden and doing the show at the old village hall singing '1, 2, ...Read more

A memory of Cranborne in 1974 by Adam Cooper

Caravan Site

My family spent two holidays around the late 1940s and early 1950s on a caravan site field, right beside a railway line in Heacham. The 'caravans' were a single-decker bus the first year, and two ambulances nailed together the second. ...Read more

A memory of Heacham in 1950 by Mervyn Watson

Great Swimming Memories From The 1950s & 60s

I remember it well, we fought to get a single cabin instead of what we called the Monkey Cabin at the end which was the communal cabin where people finished up going home wearing something they didn't ...Read more

A memory of Worksop in 1955 by Tony Mee

Captions

796 captions found. Showing results 361 to 384.

Caption For Blackboys, The Post Office C1960

Blackboys is a small iron industry village. Its name is believed to have come from the appearance of charcoal workers as they emerged from working in the woods.

Caption For Thetford, Haling Path C1955

The bridge is the Thetford Town Bridge, a cast-iron structure that dates from 1829.

Caption For Brixham, Inner Harbour 1889

Iron Age dwellers built a fortification on Berry Head, and Celtic inhabitants would have collected salt and fish where the harbour now stands.

Caption For Great Yeldham, The Oak C1960

Yeldham Oak - seen here in the background - is now a hollow stump held together with cement and iron bands.

Caption For Ixworth, The Old Mill C1955

The cast-iron breast shot waterwheel is inside the building and is dated 1800, with the initials of John Lowe, the miller.

Caption For St Ives, The Chapel Of St Nicholas C1912

Its Cornish name of Pendinas means 'fortified headland', and for centuries that was what it was - there are the remains of an Iron Age fort, and the island once held guns to ward off the threat from Napoleon's

Caption For Stourbridge, The Clock, High Street C1965

This magnificent clock is made of iron and has the words 'This column was constructed at the Stourbridge ironworks 1857' cast into its base.

Caption For Rochester, The Bridge C1955

The iron bridge, raised in 1914, carries the London road over the River Medway into Rochester; it replaced the old stone bridge, which had stood a little further upstream by the Bridge Chapel.

Caption For Bath, View From Pulteney Bridge 1914

Looking south from the bridge, the towering mass of the former Empire Hotel is on the right with its terrace. Beyond is the spire of St John the Baptist Church and the Parade Gardens.

Caption For Bath, Cleveland Place And Bridge 1929

Splendidly guarded by four toll houses or lodges in Greek temple style with Doric columned porticos, the cast-iron bridge was designed by Henry Goodrich and opened in 1827.

Caption For Great Bedwyn, High Street C1955

Behind the telegraph pole in the middle of the picture is a listed cast iron telephone kiosk of a type designed in 1935 by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott.

Caption For Eccleston, Excursion Steamer C1886

Visitors to Eaton Hall could alight here and walk through the park to the Hall, or go on a little further to Eaton Iron Bridge.

Caption For Redditch, Garden Of Remembrance C1955

Green-painted iron gates inscribed `In memory of the fallen` open into the Garden of Remembrance from Plymouth Road, just round the corner from the bus station.

Caption For Lowestoft, Yacht Basin 1896

The iron-framed Pier Pavilion can be seen in the background.

Caption For Lyndhurst, High Street 1908

Note the hay rake, coal-scuttles and assortment of pip- ing and rope adorning the window of the local iron- mongers in the centre of Lyndhurst.

Caption For Madeley Wood, From The South 1896

The most famous iron furnace here was the 'Bedlam Furnace': with its flames and smoke, and noise and grime, it must have seemed like the very gates of Hell.

Caption For Blackpool, St John's Church 1890

The iron railings were taken for the war effort in the Second World War. St John's was situated on Church Street, and perhaps its most famous vicar was William Thornber, known for his fiery sermons.

Caption For Sevenoaks, High Street C1960

On the right-hand side, Timothy White's chemist's shop boasts a cast-iron canopy over its entrance.

Caption For Maiden Newton, Dorchester Road C1960

A popular ramble is to the nearby Iron Age hillfort of Eggardon - immortalised by Thomas Hardy in his novel 'The Trumpet-Major'.

Caption For Redditch, The Parade C1950

It seems slightly ironic, given that the purpose of building societies was to enable people to own their own homes, that an attractive cottage was demolished to make way for this rather grandiose structure

Caption For Grangetown, Broadway C1955

Grangetown developed around the old Grange Farm, when a local iron works was established here by Bolckow and Vaughan in the early 1850s.

Caption For Devonport, Mount Wise 1890

These seem to have more in common with Nelson's navy than with the iron-clad battleships that were starting to dock at Devonport at this time.

Caption For Redditch, The Parade C1950

It seems slightly ironic, given that the purpose of building societies was to enable people to own their own homes, that an attractive cottage was demolished to make way for this rather grandiose structure

Caption For Newark, Town Bridge 1890

In 1848, it was widened and given footpaths and the iron railings shown.