Places
5 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
9,649 photos found. Showing results 461 to 480.
Maps
18 maps found.
Books
13 books found. Showing results 553 to 13.
Memories
4,612 memories found. Showing results 231 to 240.
Working On Church Street Six Times
When in 2018 I started work as a supervisor in a shop on Church Street, it occurred to me that I had had four jobs & two volunteer posts on the road. The first was a temporary job in the late '70's under ...Read more
A memory of Great Malvern by
Wilburton Primary School
This is the school I went to, and really enjoyed my time here. Mr. Gothard was the Headmaster. We also had a lovely Welsh teacher in the middle class, and I think Miss Yarrow took the little ones. (A very short walk ...Read more
A memory of Wilburton by
Village Store
I moved to Westergate around 1951 (aged 7) from London. My parents bought the local village shop & Off licence in the main road, opposite the Alpha Garage. I can honestly say I had a wonderful childhood living in Westergate. We ...Read more
A memory of Westergate by
First Home After Getting Married
I worked in the NAFFI in Norton which was in Worcester inJan 1972 where I meet my hubby Michael Woodcock we went out for a bit and got married in the April no I was not pregnant.We got married in Pershore ...Read more
A memory of Malvern Wells by
Lost Relatives
Would love to hear from anyone with surname Butcher or anyone connected to that name in Ludlow and surrounding villages. My father was born in Ludlow in 1913 and both sides of family also. Two great uncles were innkeepers in the late ...Read more
A memory of Ludlow by
Growing Up At Tombuie Cottage
My name is Drew Ramsay and my father retired from Calcutta India back home to Dundee in 1963 when I was 13 years old. He leased Tombuie Cottage for 5 years as a holiday home which came complete with a little over ...Read more
A memory of Tombuie Cottage by
Bennys Book .
My relatives came from Hatfield Broad Oak and Bush End . My grandfather was gamekeeper on the forest . I have pictures of him and his wife with 9 of their children . His first wife had 16 children . My grandmother ,his second ...Read more
A memory of Hatfield Broad Oak by
100 Years Of Swansborough's Living In Hurtmore
My Grandad Cecil Robert Swansborough moved into Hurtmore in 1924, he is first registered at 1 Kersland Cottages. They moved to 21?Quarry Cottages now 38 Quarry Road. They were then moved into number 3 ...Read more
A memory of Hurtmore by
Life In Burghfield In The 1950s
The passageway led from Clayhill Road all the way through the village, and came out on the Reading Road, some 2 miles away, the passageway was used by us children daily as a short cut to school, and it went ...Read more
A memory of Burghfield Common in 1955 by
Captions
5,016 captions found. Showing results 553 to 576.
The attraction of Studland is not only the attractive beach and picturesque coastal scenery, but also the wild heathland around the village.
On the Scarborough to Driffield road, Langtoft is an increasingly popular Wolds village.
The village slipway, up and down which fishing boats are still hauled to protect them from winter storms, is down the road to the left.
On the left is the distant imposing form of the Manor Hotel.
Situated in Upper Wharfedale on the road between Grassington and Aysgarth, the village was already a favourite with walkers when this photograph was taken.
Overlooking the fascinating village green from the direction of Dakyn House (1678), we see the parish church of St Peter and St Felix, which itself looks out over the remains of Ravensworth Castle.
A village inn, the 1930s car, and the shop all seem to have a timeless feel to them; they stand undisturbed on the outskirts of Prestatyn.
This village was once known as Clandon Abbots, for its manor, as in many other Surrey villages, was owned by the local abbey. Here, Chertsey Abbey owned the manor from about 666 AD.
Here we have a grand view of the railway arches heading out of Whalley.The railway arrived in the village in 1850, and the 600yd- long viaduct carries the Blackburn to Clitheroe line at a height of
'The village of Big Budworth! You may travel England round, There is not such a village in the kingdom to be found.'
A charming view of Glynn, a little Irish village about a mile to the south of Larne, on the western edge of Larne Lough. Just to the south of the village are the ruins of the old church.
The village takes its name from the well on the south side of the churchyard. It gained importance from the ferry which it operated over the Ouse to Fen Drayton.
This view looks south down the hill to the village. The churchyard is on the right, and the wooded ridge of the spur south of Dursley flows across the horizon.
This view shows the Plain. On the right, beside the village pond, a horse-drawn wagon and a group of people wait in the shade.
When suggestions were made in the early 1960s to convert this village green into a formal crossroads, the local Women's Institute galvanised villagers into action and turfed the whole area
Converted from a Georgian private house, the Village Stores and Post Office was the communal centre of the former West Yorkshire village of Wortley, which is now not much more than a suburb of the city
Acle Bridge, a mile from the village, crosses the Bure. Two years after this photograph was taken the fine stone bridge, built in about 1830, was replaced by a steel one.
Abbotts Ann takes its name from the Pillhill brook, originally the Anna or Ann stream.
We are looking at the village from the end of the pier.
The Goatscliff entrance to the village of Grindleford is little changed today from the day when this photograph was taken.
In 1910 the Borough of Wallasey was formed. This took in the UDCs of Egremont, New Brighton, Leasowe, Poulton, Moreton, Seacombe and Wallasey.
Without through traffic, this 1000-year-old village retains its rural traditions and sense of history. A century ago, West Burton was a lively farming village with a market and many shops.
Perhaps this villager is heading towards O J Hinwood, to fill up his petrol can. You do not see petrol pumps like the ones outside the shop any more.
In this carefully composed picture we see the lower part of the village. The two men, one holding the horse and one with his dog, are everything a photographer could want in a village scene.
Places (5)
Photos (9649)
Memories (4612)
Books (13)
Maps (18)