Maps

370 maps found.

Books

1 books found. Showing results 4,297 to 1.

Memories

10,360 memories found. Showing results 1,791 to 1,800.

Tulse Hill Tesco Esso Petrol Station Formerly Cheriton Court Garage

Where the present Tulse Hill Tesco Shop and Esso Petrol station stands today, was the home of my grandfather Alfred John Thomas from the 1920's to the 1950's. Through the ...Read more

A memory of Tulse Hill by Gemma Gemma

Looking Back..Ardwick..Ross Place + Ardwick Secondary Girls School

Hi i am pauline margaret coleman. i used to live in ardwick in legh place until the were demolished. i move to glossop for 40 years but i now live in cleveleys..i used to go to ardwick ...Read more

A memory of Ardwick by johnmcguire161

Xmas In Hanwell In The Sixties.

Xmas started Xmas eve. Everybody went to the pub at lunchtime and it was serious drinking. I worked in Turriff House on the Geat West Road and the pub was the Kings Arms by Brentford railway station. Around closing ...Read more

A memory of Hanwell by Nick Beard

Playtime In Waltham Road

We moved into no 76 in 1958. Mum still lives there. It was when there were allotments behind the houses that you could walk through (as long as you weren't caught), then cross a ditch before the Ashton.You could walk ...Read more

A memory of Woodford Bridge by Susan Slater Nee Stone

Painting & Decorating

This is a picture of 'The Lodge', the gate house for the Westcliffe estate. In 1966 it was home to Mr & Mrs Reg Black, he was a painter and decorator at the hall, I worked for him as a trainee. In the summer we did ...Read more

A memory of Hythe by Graham Dunbar

The First Rural Council Houses.

This village has the very first Rural Council Houses in England,- not pictured in your photographs,- but situated in Stow Road. They were built by the Thingoe R.D.C. following a lengthy argument and legal demands by the ...Read more

A memory of Ixworth by frank.holmes26

Harry

If it is the same Harry hargreavs I remember I use to knock about with him and he worked at the slaughter house that was on the Corner just where the mancunan way starts now, thats how ne came to be in the butcher game. .I lived in pine ...Read more

A memory of Salford by a.smith500

Little Sutton Allotment

Can anyone help or remember, when was the allotment started, what year? Also I am trying to find out about a sandstone "pot" quite largish that was in the allotment in approximately 1966/67. The story is ...... My ...Read more

A memory of Little Sutton by Valerie Waring

Wonderful Bread

Hi Penny, I was born and grew up in Perivale, and loved the bread and cakes from your fathers bakery, my aunt Vi Brown worked there probably 1970 ish, I remember you too, but just the name! Not sure how old you are, I will be 61 ...Read more

A memory of Perivale by becca.tutor

The House Beautiful

I remember staying at The House Beautiful in the 1950’s and to me it was not a good experience and has left its mark on me all my life. I was sent there on two occasions by Social Services as my mother was recovering from an ...Read more

A memory of Bournemouth by sjawcock

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Captions

6,977 captions found. Showing results 4,297 to 4,320.

Caption For St Margarets At Cliffe, The Village 1898

More recently, St Margaret's was the home of two literary giants, Noel Coward and later Ian Fleming, who rented a house from Coward. It was here that Fleming wrote some of his James Bond novels.

Caption For Newcastle, High Street C1951

Major-general Thomas Harrison, who served in the Parliamentary army during the Civil War, was born in a house on the High Street.

Caption For East Quantoxhead, Townsend 1929

Only a mile from a pleasant and unspoilt beach, the area attracted holiday- makers, and the occupiers of Townsend House helped satisfy their needs by offering meals and accommodation.

Caption For Luton, The Higher Grade School 1897

The houses on the right existed until the 1960s, but were in use as commercial establishments by that time.

Caption For Donington, High Street C1955

Further east, 18th-century Mansfield House on the right with its two canted bay windows and pedimented doorcase is the best building, while the one with three dormers beyond is now a county branch library

Caption For Upper Beeding, From Bridge C1955

By the end of the 18th century, the western half of the High Street contained about fifteen houses, which by 1842 had increased to about twenty-five. Several of these still survive.

Caption For Acock's Green, Clifton House C1965

Clifton House occupies the corner of Fox Hollies Road and Olton Boulevard East, and had probably been only recently completed when the photograph was taken.

Caption For Wollaston, Kingsway House, The Farm Estate C1960

The name gives the game away - not so long ago it was farmland, and now it is a housing estate.

Caption For Lechlade, The River C1955

The toll house on the far span of Halfpenny Bridge explains the unusual name, because that is how much it cost to pass over this handsome construction when it was built in the 18th century.

Caption For Blackpool, North Pier 1890

Behind the sea-front boarding houses and overlooking Talbot Square is Sacred Heart Church, which was designed by Pugin in 1857.

Caption For Bolton, Hall I'th Wood 1894

In 1799 Samuel Compton developed his spinning mule here and now, a museum in the house charts the development of textile manufacture.

Caption For Burnley, Barcroft Hall 1895

On the hillside, ¾ mile east of Towneley is this splendid house. Over the main doorway, concealed by the garden wall, the owner's name, William Barcroft, and the date 1614 is inscribed.

Caption For Morecambe, West End Promenade 1903

A later view, shows the Winter Gardens now completing the arc of guest houses and other buildings that overlook the wide promenade.

Caption For Cavendish, The Church C1960

These cottages on the green, against the backdrop of the church, are probably the most photographed houses in Suffolk.

Caption For Clare, Market Hill 1962

On the left is a terrace of brick houses and shops built c1865. Barclay's Bank closed in 2000, but the Co-op still trades from the ground floor, although it now has a mid-1990s shop front.

Caption For Port Isaac, 1938

The occupants jumped to safety, but the Landrover buried itself in the roof of a house below; from there it had to be removed piecemeal, as the site was too inaccessible to use a crane.

Caption For Wakefield, Wood Street C1953

Further up is the Mechanics' Institution, or Institute of Literature and Science, now housing the Wakefield Museum.

Caption For Biddenden, The Village C1960

Most of the delightful old houses along this street were constructed during the 15th century, at a time when the village prospered as part of the profitable cloth trade centred on Cranbrook.

Caption For Groombridge, The Green C1960

Its name is said to derive from a Saxon, Gromen (which translates simply as 'the man' or 'groom'), who built a moated castle where the 17th-century private house Groombridge Place now stands.

Caption For Bath, The Paragon 1911

Continue down Lansdown Road to The Paragon, a superb terrace of twenty-one houses set between two roads on steeply differing levels, their stables and vaults fronting Walcot Street far below.

Caption For Bath, Fernley Hotel 1935

Now renamed The Abbey Hotel, this terrace of houses became an hotel in 1879. It is part of the elder Wood's Royal Forum, with its long, formal composition fronting North Parade.

Caption For Painswick, C1965

At the heart of the village is the churchyard with its 99 yew trees; surrounding it are stone houses, shops and hotels, some steeply gabled and half-timbered, others Georgian with elegant facades.

Caption For Rugby, Clifton Road 1922

The shops on the right had all been private houses only a few years earlier.

Caption For Walsham Le Willows, High Street 1959

The house on the left was the bakery of William Kenny; hidden behind the next building is the Reading Room of 1858. To the right is Harry Nunn's hardware shop, which closed in c1980.