Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Low Row, Yorkshire
- Low Bentham, Yorkshire
- Low Hutton, Yorkshire (near Malton)
- Low Fell, Tyne and Wear
- Low Dalby, Yorkshire
- Lowe, Shropshire
- Fenton Low, Staffordshire
- Low Leighton, Derbyshire
- Low Marnham, Nottinghamshire
- Low Snaygill, Yorkshire
- Low Street, Essex
- Low Town, Shropshire
- Low Valleyfield, Fife
- Low Angerton, Northumberland
- Low Barugh, Yorkshire
- Low Bradley, Yorkshire
- Low Ellington, Yorkshire
- Low Fulney, Lincolnshire
- Low Gate, Northumberland
- Low Laithe, Yorkshire
- Cauldon Lowe, Staffordshire
- Low Barlings, Lincolnshire
- Low Bradfield, Yorkshire
- Low Burnham, Humberside
- Low Grantley, Yorkshire
- Low Hauxley, Northumberland
- Low Hawsker, Yorkshire
- Low Hesket, Cumbria
- Lowes Barn, Durham
- Low Whita, Yorkshire
- Low Torry, Fife
- Low Valley, Yorkshire
- Low Westwood, Durham
- Low Worsall, Yorkshire
- Lowe Hill, Staffordshire
- Low Borrowbridge, Cumbria
Photos
267 photos found. Showing results 301 to 267.
Maps
509 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
633 memories found. Showing results 151 to 160.
Southampton Zoo
i remember being taken to the zoo on the common many times as a kid. it was very small and probably not a nice place for some of the animals to live. i particularly remember watching the big cats pacing up an down in their cages as ...Read more
A memory of Southampton by
Remembrance Day In Kingsclere.
We, in the choir led the procession: down through the village to the Church,(from Knoll Hill I think) .Brownies, Guides and other groups including the odd serviceman home on leave followed behind.I am standing in the ...Read more
A memory of Kingsclere by
Distant Memories Of An Evacuee
My name is Nigel Redding and I was sent to Llangynwyd about 1942/43? as an evacuee. I was aged about 3 or 4 years old and accompanied by my older brother Alan who was 5 years older. (Both born in Rogerstone , ...Read more
A memory of Llangynwyd by
Memories Of Overbury ( And Wolsey ) Schools New Addington
I also went to Overbury from Wolsey probably in '55. Hanlon was there ( horrible little man - I remember a mass caning in front of the entire school because a toilet was vandalised and he ...Read more
A memory of New Addington by
Denbigh Road Schools Luton
I attended Denbigh Road school in 1944 at the age of five and had advanced to both junior and senior schools by the age of twelve. My sister Margaret took me in on my first day but I was not too keen on staying as I ...Read more
A memory of Luton by
Brief Memories Of My First School: Noak Hill
It was 1947, when my parents were told they would be able to move from their one room in a house to a Prefab in Harold Hill. My mother was pregnant. You didn't start school until you were 5. The closest ...Read more
A memory of Noak Hill by
Cantley As I Knew It
I was born there 1929 and i lived there till 1945 we had 3 shops a p office postman lived in village delivered 3 times a day also a policeman on his bike many good memories of ...Read more
A memory of Cantley by
1973 Demolition Year For The Market Buildings
I arrived in Wolverhampton when demolition of the market buildings was under way. The buildings in front of the church (in the photo) must have already been long gone, but the buildings on the side ...Read more
A memory of Wolverhampton
Happy Holidays.
I have many happy memories of holidays spent at Dhoon from about 1934 to 1940, when I was under ten years old. My parents had visited the Isle of man for many years before I was born and had discovered Dhoon on those visits. We used to ...Read more
A memory of Dhoon by
My Golden Years At Stokes Bay
I was born in Gosport in 1929, my father was a long serving seaman in the Royal Navy and so our family life was all things navy - so Stokes Bay was a big part of our lives. I had three elder sisters who were ...Read more
A memory of Stokes Bay by
Captions
477 captions found. Showing results 361 to 384.
The Town Hall was built in 1881 to a design by John Lowe with a pavilion roof and tall chimney pots.
There is also a Victorian east window and niches to left and right of the low panelled chancel arch.
The fine spire dominates the skyline and announces Fenstanton across the low-lying Fenland.
On the right of the tree, the low tiled building is the Forge (now Forge Cottage), whilst the brick-fronted houses are the delightfully named April and May Cottages.
The low building extending from the left is the Colonnade, which was demolished by a storm in 1897 and replaced by the Royal Pavilion in 1904.
Low pews in the chancel served as choir stalls.
The war memorial is now in a low walled area as part of the precinct's hard landscaping.
The low level of the banks on either side and the high tidal range meant that conventional bridge designs were not practical, and so Haynes and Arnodin engineered a bridge that could be operated without
There is a low mound beside the church.
Longshanks trusted de Newark enough to send him on diplomatic missions to the Low Countries, and as well to Rome to discuss matters relating to the crusades.
The low brick building, with Ketton stone facings, cost £8,000.
The standard plan puts the main entrance up two steps, with the assembly hall on the left under a low pitched roof, the boiler chimney in the middle, and classrooms to the right.
For many years it has been the premises of Charles Lowe's furniture and antiques business.
The standard plan puts the main entrance up two steps, with the assembly hall on the left under a low pitched roof, the boiler chimney in the middle, and classrooms to the right.
The 15th-century local granite and limestone church tower of St Peter and St Paul shows above the low rise houses which bound The Green; it was heavily 'restored' in 1872 by F W Ordish.
The long, low 17th-century house, right, has fine stone-mullioned and drip- headed windows.
The telephone box is still in the same position, although a new brick-based post box has been installed, and goods for sale have now spilled out onto the pavement.
At low tide, these broad sands offer plenty of space for youngsters to enjoy their summer fun.
The housewife in the 1950s had a daily trip to the shops, as the private ownership of refrigerators was fairly low, and dairy products and meat could not be kept for long.
The building was occupied by Halfords, and is now the Oxfam shop.
The low brick building, with Ketton stone facings, cost £8,000.
The road works warned of by the sign were never likely to be the cause of too many traffic jams when car ownership was still quite low and the availability and use of public transport correspondingly
Christ Church was erected in 1838 and comprised a chancel, nave and a low tower, but it was soon replaced by a new building designed by Maxwell & Tuke.
Trossachs, overtopped by Ben Ledi and other high mountains, enclose the lake at the head: and those houses which we had seen before, with their cornfields sloping towards the water, stood very prettily under low
Places (90)
Photos (267)
Memories (633)
Books (0)
Maps (509)