Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Hook Head, Republic of Ireland
- Trevose Head, Cornwall
- Beachy Head, Sussex
- St Govan's Head, Dyfed
- Gurnard's Head, Cornwall
- Hill Head, Hampshire
- Spurn Head, Yorkshire
- Wasdale Head, Cumbria (near Boot)
- Worms Head, West Glamorgan
- Hengistbury Head, Dorset
- Heads, Strathclyde
- Birches Head, Staffordshire
- Bednall Head, Staffordshire
- Butlane Head, Shropshire
- Chapel Head, Cambridgeshire
- Chinley Head, Derbyshire
- Carroway Head, Staffordshire
- Darley Head, Yorkshire
- Lane Heads, Lancashire
- Seend Head, Wiltshire
- Stag's Head, Devon
- Shawfield Head, Yorkshire
- Flamborough Head, Yorkshire
- Heads Nook, Cumbria
- Hollis Head, Devon
- West Head, Norfolk
- Thames Head, Gloucestershire
- Well Heads, Yorkshire
- Hallam Head, Yorkshire
- Haugh-head, Borders
- Garsdale Head, Cumbria
- Meadow Head, Yorkshire
- Mewith Head, Yorkshire
- Maiden Head, Avon
- Nag's Head, Gloucestershire
- Stags Head, Dyfed
Photos
1,491 photos found. Showing results 361 to 380.
Maps
575 maps found.
Books
3 books found. Showing results 433 to 3.
Memories
2,508 memories found. Showing results 181 to 190.
Days Gone By
My family arrived in Seaforth late in 1939 after we were shipped back from Gibraltar where my father was stationed with the Kings Regiment. Early memories of our house in Holly Grove are vague. My sister Maureen and I, along with ...Read more
A memory of Seaforth in 1940 by
My Early Days
I was born in Abercych and lived there until I was 10 in 1947. I returned every year in the summer for over 20 years. My grandfather and his brother used to make coracles and did a lot of salmon fishing, and frequented the Nags Head ...Read more
A memory of Abercych in 1947
Boyhood Memories From 1952
It was around this time that the tram lines were taken up from Sunderland Road in Gateshead. The men stored the old lines in Somerset Street and Devonshire Street. As boys we would dig up the tar from around the ...Read more
A memory of Gateshead in 1952 by
Family History
It was a very sad day when Laindon School closed and even worse when it was demolished. I have fond memories of my days at Laindon, I joined when Mr Chadband was head, and made many friends there. Apart from attending myself I was ...Read more
A memory of Laindon by
A Townie In Timberland 1947
My memory is of arriving in Timberland with my widowed mother to look after my grandad, George Curtis. I had to go to Timberland C of E school, imagine me, 9 years old and wiv a Sussex accent, everyone called me a ...Read more
A memory of Timberland
Croydon Thornton Heath And Norbury
I was born and brought up in Croydon and although I now live in the Channel Islands I still regard it as my home. I remember living in Northborough Road, Norbury and attending Norbury Manor Infants School only ...Read more
A memory of Croydon in 1963 by
My Second Home
Right from a small child i have grown up loving Wells-next-the-Sea, my dad used to take us on holidays there and we stayed in a little cottage which was a short walk to the quay where my brother and I would wander down to ...Read more
A memory of Wells-Next-The-Sea in 1969
The Castle School For Boys
I was in Castle School from 1961 to 1964. It was good at times and also bad. Mr Bowls was the head, and didn't we know it. I had the walking stick on many a Friday morning after assembly. I cannot remember any names ...Read more
A memory of Stanhope in 1961 by
Coastguard Station
We came to Bolt Head in 1950, my father having joined the Coastguard service after being in the Royal Navy for 40 years. I found it quite a way to cycle to work, I worked in the post office in Malborough. I used to go ...Read more
A memory of Bolt Head in 1950 by
Raf Radar At Inverbervie
I was based in Inverbervie from March 1957 till March 1958 with 977 Signals Unit of the Royal Air Force. 977 SU operated radar from an underground site on the hill a couple of miles north of the village. Height finding ...Read more
A memory of Inverbervie in 1957 by
Captions
1,136 captions found. Showing results 433 to 456.
The road is heading towards the old Cerebos salt factory on the outskirts of the village.
On the corner of Low Road, leading to the King's Head, are houses called St Margaret and St Mary (centre left). The prominent jettied timber-framed building facing us is Waterloo House of c1540.
Note the jaunty open-top car, no doubt heading through Preston and on to Blackpool.
Ipswich, at the head of the Orwell Estuary, has been a major port for centuries. Here, a sailing barge negotiates the lock gates.
There is just space to bring a few open fishing boats between the rocks to a slipway at this little cove down by the granite cliffs of Gwennap Head.
The smooth slopes of Skiddaw dominate the northern Lakeland town of Keswick in this view from Castle Head.
To the south lies Humphrey Head, which according to legend was the place where the last wolf in England was killed.
This view, looking west from the slopes of Place Fell, is towards the head of the lake at Glenridding, and shows the northern stretch.
On the left is 'The King's Head', its signboard depicting Henry VIII - John Skelton was tutor to the portly King when he was still Prince of Wales.
On the promenade above, a tram is heading for Birnbeck Pier.
This view from The King's Head at Newton-under-Roseberry shows the quarried face of Roseberry Topping, known affectionately as 'the Matterhorn of Cleveland', which stands at just over 1,000 feet above
Off to the left is the King's Head Inn. The buildings are unchanged, but the baker's and the hardware shop have both been closed.
Beachy Head is where the chalk range of the South Downs reaches the sea in magnificent chalk cliffs rearing almost vertically five hundred feet out of the sea.
At the foot of Roseberry Topping is the hamlet of Newton under Roseberry, and in this view we see the Kings Head Inn (extreme right).
The bronze head on the statue was designed and cast by the sculptor Fred Mancini.
This view shows Victoria Street at the crossing with Ann Street, heading for Queen's Bridge. The telephone wires must also have been going over the river.
Springfield had started to grow after the canal-basin arrived here. Holy Trinity was built in 1843 as a chapel of ease for the expanding population.
Standing at the head of the Eastern Valley, in an industrially ravaged landscape, Blaenavon was declared a World Heritage Site in 2000.
The length of the boat is fairly substantial compared to the head of the jetty, so she requires delicate and careful manoeuvring if she is to be handled
As we move further eastwards, the vista concludes with this dramatic portrayal of Penarth Head and its cliffs.
hamlet was engulfed by a major cross-roads and roundabout —the intersection of the A127 Romford to Southend Road and the A128.The brick-built hilltop church is said to be the burial place of the head
The famous Liver birds, which gave the city its name, look out across the Pier Head from clock towers 295 feet tall, whose faces are each 25 feet in diameter and larger than those of Big Ben
Continuing uphill past the end of The Paragon and at the junction with Guinea Lane, Roman Road heads for the junction with a steeply climbing Walcot Street and London Road.
Ribble Valley archaeological finds are on display at Ribchester Museum, including the replica of a Romano-Celtic head and metal objects from the Iron Age hill fort at Portfield, Whalley.
Places (132)
Photos (1491)
Memories (2508)
Books (3)
Maps (575)