Places
23 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Mead Vale, Surrey
- Meads, Sussex
- Wall Mead, Avon
- Mead, Devon (near Morwenstow)
- Mead, Devon (near Ashburton)
- Abbot's Meads, Cheshire
- Thicket Mead, Avon
- Chownes Mead, Sussex
- Chertsey Meads, Surrey
- Mead End, Wiltshire
- Nazeing Mead, Essex
- Rushey Mead, Leicestershire
- Teasley Mead, Sussex
- Coles Meads, Surrey
- Abbey Mead, Surrey
- Ilchester Mead, Somerset
- Old Mead, Essex
- Port Mead, West Glamorgan
- Mill Meads, Greater London
- Bushey Mead, Greater London
- White Ox Mead, Avon
- Mead End, Hampshire (near Lymington)
- Mead End, Hampshire (near Horndean)
Photos
75 photos found. Showing results 21 to 40.
Maps
658 maps found.
Books
3 books found. Showing results 25 to 3.
Memories
579 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
Shops
Bryant's Post Office with Mrs Robson, a Queen Motherish figure always dressed in a black two piece, dishing out pensions, stamps and postal orders from the aloof position behind her cage. Duggie Bain's cobblers, the warm oily smell, ...Read more
A memory of Howden-le-Wear by
Haywards Of Loders Family Tree Search
Hello from Australia to Loders, Researching on-line family Thomas Hayward, m Mary Anne Dodge 1808 November in Sherborne church. Already one gggg cousin Jill Hayward left an entry but has not made contact. ...Read more
A memory of Loders by
Living In Chilton
My family moved to Chilton Foliat and took over the "Old Post Office". I was still young then and went to the old school run by Mr & Mrs Hassall who lived next door to the school. Two classrooms and very fond memories. ...Read more
A memory of Chilton Foliat in 1964 by
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
Those Lovely Days
These days Greylake's claim to fame is the council tip where people get rid of their rubbish, but when I was a little girl it was one of the greatest places in the world to me. If you go a couple of fields past the tip and ...Read more
A memory of Greylake in 1955 by
Growing Up In Greenford In The 1960s And 1970s
Here are some random memories: Lists Bakeries on Greenford Broadway. Lovely aroma, tasty bread. The paper bags all used to have the slogan 'Good Flavour Always Finds Favour'. The covered market ...Read more
A memory of Greenford by
Tales Of College Green
This shows College Green and its grand posh upmarket shops, at a time in the past when parking wasn't a problem. Many famous people lived round the Green over the years including Mary Robinson; actress and mistress of the ...Read more
A memory of Bristol by
The Mount In The Early 1970s
I went to see 'The Jungle Book' in the Odeon and remember the restaurant opposite - dead posh. I worked in the tiny TESCO supermarket which was opposite Rossis. In the 1970s Rossis was a mecca for teenagers as ...Read more
A memory of South Harefield by
Memories Of Covenham As A Child
I was born in Covenham in Zeplin Row in 1950. I remember going to bed with candles as that was the only form of lighting we had. If it was cold in the winter I can remember my mum wraping up the warm oven ...Read more
A memory of Covenham St Mary in 1950 by
Keel History
Hi, I have been reseaching my family on the Keel side, and have found a Barnard Keel, working with his father David and mother Mildred in The Plough in Westfield, Battle, Sussex. They were the publicans in the 1910's or ...Read more
A memory of Westfield in 1910 by
Captions
156 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
Basildon's first new school—Swan Mead Junior & Infants, in Church Road—opened in April 1954. Kingswood was built soon after.
By 1894 the Meads area is filling up with villas.
Reading developed further south on higher land along the banks of the River Kennet, well away from the then marshy meads bordering the River Thames.
Ray Mead Road passes between the gardens, which partly survive, and Bridge House. Sadly Bridge House is no more: a Texaco garage does not seem an equitable exchange in townscape terms.
The tree and garden walls belong to the Meades, a house of about 1800 with a fine Ionic porch and set in large grounds.
The roughcast was stripped and the timbers exposed, and new housing was built behind in Bunyans Mead. The Swan is still an inn and virtually unchanged now.
Apart from some mechanism, all that remains is Laundry Mead to the left of the view; here, it is said, the rags were hung out to dry before being mashed by the mill's trip hammers to make high quality
If we scratch beneath the surface, we will find tales of old manor houses, smuggling, the deadly marsh fever, ghosts, education, transport, and a new form of religion, retail therapy!
After the First World War, a dignified war memorial was built at the north end of the Market Square with the names of the dead on bronze plaques.
This is an evocative view of a long-dead Chelsea, with sailing vessels moored along the Embankment, one apparently with a cargo of hay.
The garden directly below it is now a garden of remembrance to the dead of Dunkirk, Normandy, Korea, Malaysia and other campaigns.
It contained one chamber for the dead and was originally surrounded by a large oval mound; this was last recorded in the 19th century, but is now obliterated by man and time!
This photograph shows Mildenhall's war memorial, honouring the town's dead from the First World War. The statue is bright and new, and the grass is neatly trimmed.
In the background on Calton Hill stands the unfinished monument to the Scottish dead of the Napoleonic Wars. The monument was started in 1822, but the money ran out and it was never completed.
The names of the dead are not shown on the memorial, but are inscribed on rolls held in the Borough archives.
The inscription tells us that a Ruth Pierce asked heaven to strike her dead if she had lied about money.
Lying at the end of a little lane that is a dead end, this is yet another former port that now lies, quite literally, some miles inland - the church even has an iron ring attached to it where once, so
The second of the two major wars, the dead of which are commemorated in this memorial, would have still been fresh in the memories of the people sitting here. This scene remains unchanged today.
Beside the memorial to the dead of two world wars is a statue to another of Colne's brave sons, Wallace Hartley.
Motor vehicles are now in evidence, and the War Memorial has been built; it was erected to honour Bakewell's dead in the 1914-18 war.
The name Trethevy means 'place of the dead'.
The name Trethevy means 'place of the dead'.
Taking the form of a Celtic cross, it remembered the dead of the town during the First World War, which had ended just a year before.
Among the dead was the MacDonald chieftain MacIan of Glencoe, who was buried on the island of Eilean Munde.
Places (23)
Photos (75)
Memories (579)
Books (3)
Maps (658)