Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- East Dean, Sussex (near Eastbourne)
- Cookham Dean, Berkshire
- Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire
- Dean Prior, Devon
- Long Dean, Wiltshire
- West Dean, Wiltshire
- West Dean, Sussex
- East Dean, Sussex (near Charlton)
- Dean's Green, Warwickshire
- Dean, Oxfordshire
- Dean, Dorset
- Deane, Hampshire
- Dean, Hampshire (near Winchester)
- Deans, Lothian
- Dean, Lothian
- Dean, Cumbria
- Dean, Lancashire (near Bacup)
- Dean, Devon (near Lynton)
- Deane, Greater Manchester
- Dean, Devon (near Kentisbury)
- Dean, Hampshire (near Bishop's Waltham)
- Deans Bottom, Kent
- Stewkley Dean, Buckinghamshire
- Wendover Dean, Buckinghamshire
- Dean Court, Oxfordshire
- Upper Dean, Devon
- Upper Dean, Bedfordshire
- East Dean, Gloucestershire
- Dean Bank, Durham
- Dean Row, Cheshire
- Dean Cross, Devon
- Dean Head, Yorkshire
- Dean Street, Kent
- Deans Hill, Kent
- East Dean, Hampshire
- Lower Dean, Devon
Photos
179 photos found. Showing results 21 to 40.
Maps
207 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
614 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
Life In Cannich And Fasnakyle
My family and I moved from Elm Park in Essex to Scotland in the last weeks of 1948. My father, Leon A. Lalonde, had accepted a position as Chief Mechanical Engineer with John Cochrane and Sons, a construction ...Read more
A memory of Glen Affric in 1949 by
Looking Back At My Life Growing Up, And Working In Fareham Plus More.
Leaving Southampton Road School in 1954, I started working on the outskirts of Titchfield for Sanders & Sons in their tomato glass houses, which was a good working start for me. ...Read more
A memory of Fareham by
Tommy Porthcawl On The Seashore.
Tommy was the ventrioquist's dummy and the morning's show was not to be missed when on family holiday from Penarth in early August 1936. I would be eight in the October of that year. As far as I recollect there was ...Read more
A memory of Porthcawl by
Kingsbury
The WWI tank was removed because little boys used to enter and use it as a toilet. It exploded when the welder went to work on it because there was still petrol in the fuel tank, not ammunition. The welder flew across Kingsbury and ...Read more
A memory of Aylesbury in 1956 by
Unlawater Hotel
This hotel was owned by my mother Patricia Woods till around 1959. Newnham was a busy place then. H G Zeal had a thermometer factory in the High Street. Above the hotel was a dairy farm run by A.Jones (Dean Forest farm). As a ...Read more
A memory of Newnham in 1956 by
'holiday House'.
I was born and lived the early years of my life in South Molton. My father had his own building firm there. In 1958 we moved to Croyde Bay my father having bought this large house on the cliffs above the bay for £1800. This photo ...Read more
A memory of Croyde by
Memories From My Father Rod Dean
This is what Dad had to say when I emailed him this site and the photos from 1955. Dad lived in Oakley from childhood until 1987, when as a family we moved to Adelaide Australia. I myself lived in the village from ...Read more
A memory of Oakley in 1955 by
Growing Up In Fareham
I was born in Brighton Sussex. After travelling from station to station, as my father was in the RAF (I'll miss out that part of the story), My mother Eileen,sister Shirley & I moved to Fareham after the 2nd WW, I was 9 ...Read more
A memory of Fareham by
Mum's Memories!
It seems that my great great grandparents lived in Blackfriars Tower, sometime in 1920/1930s. Though my mum had told my sister that she remembers visiitng her grandmother in the Tower, she felt that Mum had confused it with ...Read more
A memory of Great Yarmouth in 1920 by
A Long Way From St Pauls Road
Hi, my name is Susan Thompson, formerly Hawkins and I'm 54, I was born in the above address and lived there for 18 years although my parents lived there for over 40 years. I went to Brook St. school finally ...Read more
A memory of Northumberland Heath in 1967 by
Captions
170 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
The Lydney Canal is just one mile long with one lock and the tidal doors seen here, but it was an important and busy port for the shipment of coal from mines in the Forest of Dean.
Mary's was given to the Dean and Chapter of Lincoln in 1100, an event which probably took place shortly after its building.
On the floor, to the right as we face the altar, is the gravestone of John de Berwick, a dean of the minster, who died in 1312.
In between these two great rivers lies the Forest of Dean, of which Coleford is one of the principal towns.
John Fell, Dean of Christ Church and Bishop of Oxford, engaged Christopher Wren to crown the main gateway with this splendid creation, transferring the medieval bell from the cathedral to the college
Continuing south, cross the Eastbourne to Seaford road into the centre of East Dean village with its steep winding lanes.
Between 1854 and 1972 it was used by the Army; prior to that it was a fish- pond for the dean and chapter of Winchester Cathedral.
Swift (1667 - 1745), became Dean of St Patrick's in 1713.
Between 1854 and 1972 it was used by the Army; prior to that it was a fishpond for the dean and chapter of Winchester Cathedral.
In 1844 it was acquired by the Dean and Chapter to use for St Peter's School, which had outgrown its former site.
Tillingham has been owned by the Dean and Chapter of St Paul's since at least 604.
On the right is a striking 19th-century congregational church with a large Tuscan portico, while nearby are some almshouses founded in 1607 by Sir James Deane.
Much of the best part is now owned by the National Trust, who also own a fair amount of Cookham Dean's open space.
Built in St Mary`s churchyard in the late 17th century with an endowment from Thomas Deane de Parke, this building educated the village boys until early last century.
The Premier Wireless Stores on the right is now Dean's TV Services.
The almost Arts and Crafts Deane Parade on the far right of the photograph is typical of his pleasant but unexciting buildings.
The Iron Choir Screen which separated the entrance to the choir from the nave was removed in 1959 by order of the Dean and Chapter, presumably to give an uninterrupted view from the western entrance
The Premier Wireless Stores on the right is now Dean's TV Services.
The first chapter's tour starts in the heart of the lush Vale of Taunton Deane in the county town of Taunton, a bustling town with much of its former through traffic taken by the nearby M5.
To the left we can see St Margaret's Church, and on the right are the offices erected in 1854 over the entrance to Dean's Yard.
It was named Dean Close in honour of Francis Close, sometime Bishop of Carlisle.
In 1844 it was acquired by the Dean and Chapter to use for St Peter's School, which had outgrown its former site.
John Fell, Dean of Christ Church and Bishop of Oxford, engaged Christopher Wren to crown the main gateway with this splendid creation, transferring the medieval bell from the cathedral to the college
The Victorian Church of All Saints in Harnham was built in 1854 and dedicated to the memory of a former Dean of Salisbury Cathedral.
Places (43)
Photos (179)
Memories (614)
Books (0)
Maps (207)