Maps

786 maps found.

1923, Jodrell Bank Ref. POP745159
1925, Kents Bank Ref. POP746331
1924, Hoole Bank Ref. POP740015
1921, Howbeck Bank Ref. POP741323
1920, Marl Bank Ref. POP774762
1924, Moss Bank Ref. POP784136
1947, Bowling Bank Ref. NPO647338
1947, Bracken Bank Ref. NPO647618
1946, Black Bank Ref. NPO641337
1947, Bank Lane Ref. NPO632395
1947, Bank Top Ref. NPO632422
1947, Chirk Bank Ref. NPO668060
1947, Coal Bank Ref. NPO672533
1946, Broomhill Bank Ref. NPO652485
1947, Crag Bank Ref. NPO679938
1923, Longway Bank Ref. POP767242
1925, Green Bank Ref. POP720723
1924, Hale Bank Ref. POP724848
1947, Oak Bank Ref. NPO795165
1947, Mill Bank Ref. NPO779960

Books

15 books found. Showing results 433 to 15.

Memories

6,742 memories found. Showing results 181 to 190.

Pinner Mid 50's

I was fortunate enough to live in Pinner as a small child 8 & 9 years old. We lived on 9 Nower Hill, and I remember befriending the railway station ticket lady. She and I used to go out to the parking lot (which was gravel back ...Read more

A memory of Pinner by Joel Fisher

Sandbanks

Sandy banks in strelley village is a place in the 70s where we would build rope swings and camp

A memory of Strelley by Susan Lee

Wrinstead Court

I went to Wrinsted Court with my mother and brother and sister in 1950. We went as tenants. Here is a short background. My father was killed in 1941 as he was in the Navy. Then my mother met my first step-father who was also ...Read more

A memory of Wrinsted Court by Christine Smith

My Time At Tylney Hall School

Hi my name is Peter Hatch and I went to Tylney from West Mark probably in 1954 until 1957 . My best friends at Tylney and still today are Peter Loxton and Leo Bonassera . Peter later changed his name to peter Dukes . ...Read more

A memory of Rotherwick by Peter Hatch

A Schoolboy's View Of Bexleyheath In The Early 1950s

I went to school in Bexleyheath between 1950 and 1954. I believe the school was in Pelham Road but I can't be sure. Maybe there was a separate infants department in North Street? My first ...Read more

A memory of Bexleyheath in 1950 by John Howard Norfolk

Upper Heyford School

My father was stationed at RAF Upper Heyford 1949 to 1953.  My brothers, Peter, Michael and myself, Mary, went to the village school.  My older brother Richard went to school in Steeple Aston.  I remember the ...Read more

A memory of Upper Heyford in 1949 by mooremary4

Family Involvement

My memories of our familý's involvement in Sanderstead Church is only from the late 1940's and early 50's. I was a pageboy at the age of about 8 or 9 yrs old at my sister's wedding.  Then, one of my older brothers was a choir ...Read more

A memory of Sanderstead by Eric Lovett

My Home Town

My wife moved to Sutton 1950 aged 4, now aged 60 and living in Norfolk we are rekindling memories of such a warm and inviting town. Memories come flooding back. The railway station, the cinema, the old tree outside Trueforms where my ...Read more

A memory of Sutton in 1963 by David Buettner Banks

Cross Keys Camp

Iv been trying for years to find something out about the camp . I was born there in 1948 when my farther Mr Arthur Blowes was sent to North Korea when he back from the Second World War

A memory of Roxwell by Sheila Peasey

Wartime In Ickburgh Fields

I was evacuated with my mother to a back to back semi-detached flint cottage situated in a clearing in the pine forests. There was no sanitation or running water or electricity. There was a tiny kitchen with a black ...Read more

A memory of Ickburgh Fields by Marion Mac Donald

Captions

2,423 captions found. Showing results 433 to 456.

Caption For Salisbury, Silver Street And Bridge Street C1955

In this picture, the impressive County Hotel and Barclays Bank (built originally as a wine and spirit warehouse) can be seen on the corner, with the clock tower and the old Infirmary beyond.

Caption For Norwich, Post Office And Prince Of Wales Road 1896

On the right, the old Crown Bank of 1866 became the post office.

Caption For Helston, Coinagehall Street 1913

Great Western Railway motor buses like the one struggling up the hill past the Cornish Bank were introduced in 1903, but it was many years before the horse disappeared from the streets.

Caption For Lower Swell, The Village C1955

Not far distant from the Slaughters are the little villages of Lower and Upper Swell, both situated in an entrancing rural landscape along the banks of the River Dikler.

Caption For Thrapston, The Nine Arches Bridge C1955

This view is also from the Islip bank, but further upstream. The houses in the distance have been demolished.

Caption For Evesham, Bell Tower From The Avon 1892

Notice the Romany caravans at rest on the far bank.

Caption For Meifod, The Village C1955

There is everything you could want in one terrace of highly disparate buildings here in the centre of the village, from the whitewashed Midland Bank at the far end to some 'Players Please' at Rowland's

Caption For Stanford Le Hope, View From Church Tower C1960

The large house next to Lloyds Bank was once a doctor's surgery, and it is now a public house known as the Inn on the Green.

Caption For Newnham, The Clock Tower C1955

The clock tower dates from 1875, by which time Newnham had long ceased to be the most important Gloucestershire town on the west bank of the river.

Caption For Neatishead, Backwater

Bundles of Norfolk reed are stacked on both banks of this shallow backwater. The growing of reeds provides one of the principal industries of the broads area.

Caption For Dittisham, On The Dart 1889

Dittisham is one of the larger villages along the steeply wooded banks of the romantic Dart estuary. A foot ferry takes passengers across the river to Greenway, once the home of Dame Agatha Christie.

Caption For Shoreham By Sea, Norfolk Bridge 1919

The Lighthouse c1960 The striking stone-built lighthouse at Southwick dates back to 1846; though no longer in use, it is still regarded fondly as a local landmark.

Caption For Aldeburgh, The Beach 1906

The ever-changing coastline has very much dictated the fortunes of Aldeburgh, but one thing which has not changed is the activity of local fishermen, who park their boats on the shingle bank which runs

Caption For Dublin, Trinity College And The Bank Of Ireland 1897

The main facade of Trinity College stands on the right with its statues by Foley of famous alumni Edmund Burke and Oliver Goldsmith, while on the left is the Bank of Ireland.

Caption For Hawkshead, Grammar School 1892

The school, now a museum and library, sits comfortably beneath the bank on which the parish church of St Michael, seen in the background, stands.

Caption For Dartmouth, Warfleet Road 1934

Gunfield House, now a hotel, took its name from One Gun Fort, where gunnery officers trained by shelling the opposite bank.

Caption For Stopham, Bridge 1932

The ancient White Hart inn is seen on the opposite bank.

Caption For Topsham, The Quay 1906

Regular cruises take enthusiasts down-river to see the famous avocets on the river's mud banks. These fisherfolk and boat- men share a rare idle moment in a busy day.

Caption For Stroud, King Street 1925

By the mid 1920s the Midland Bank building, beyond Lewis and Godfrey's drapery store, had replaced Sidney Park's shop. The Royal George Hotel had by now ceased business.

Caption For Whittlesey, The Memorial C1965

Behind the memorial is the Trustees Savings Bank and the county library.

Caption For Evesham, Hampton Ferry 1895

As befits an important agricultural area, a number of mills prospered on the banks of the River Avon - an inspiration to every passing artist and photographer.

Caption For Woking, Old Bank 1901

Buildings such as Woking's fine, if somewhat dull, Old Bank had no place in the exciting, post-war redeveloped Woking.

Caption For Fakenham, Market Place C1955

As a market town, Fakenham serves the needs of a wide area of villages and farms - as is suggested by the presence of the main national banks.

Caption For Elsenham, Fullers End C1960

It later became the NatWest Bank. The two pubs featured here are The King's Arms (far left) and, up the hill, The Barley Mow.