Places
4 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
6 photos found. Showing results 481 to 6.
Maps
65 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 577 to 1.
Memories
4,575 memories found. Showing results 241 to 250.
Memories Of Working At Ultra Tv Factory Fareham Hants.
My name is Rosalind....I was sixteen when I started work at the Ultra Tv factory in Gosport Rd, Fareham. Well many years have past by, my memory is a bit vague of remembering peoples names who I ...Read more
A memory of Fareham by
Davidson Road School
Does anyone remember Davidson Road Secondary Modern School? This was late 1950's pre co-education days so although housed in the same building, girls were upstairs and boys downstairs. Seperate playgrounds and 'never the twain ...Read more
A memory of Croydon in 1958 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
West End
I was born on a not very pleasant day in February 1954! We lived in the Dunkirk area of the West End below the factory/mill on Dunkirk Lane. We had "The Green" to play on, Warley Road, and then the "Top Park" further up when we were a little ...Read more
A memory of Halifax by
Another Slice Of Life In Burghfield And Sulhampstead
My Grandfather George Thomas Cooper 1880 to 1957 lived at Hebron a Detached Victorian House ( which is opposite what today is Coopers Place, named after my late Father Phillip George ...Read more
A memory of Burghfield Common by
Born In 1942 Lived In Westbrook Road
Born in 1942, Lived in Westbrook Road. Attended Heston Infants School, Heston Junior School and Spring Grove Central School. I have lots of memories, but reading other people’s entries has reminded me of names of ...Read more
A memory of Heston by
Queen Elizabeth Ii Coronation Day 2.6.1953 In Blackfen
My Mum, Dad and I watched the coronation on our 9“ TV. Mum had made crisps. In the afternoon a children‘s coronation party was held in the George‘s garage (Raeburn Road) because of the ...Read more
A memory of Blackfen by
Past Relatives
My grandmother grew up in Pye Bridge. Her father worked at the collary for some time. It came with some sadness though, her older sister having drownd in the canal at a young age and then her younger brother being lost in WWII age ...Read more
A memory of Pye Bridge
The Willows Butcher
I don’t have the memory myself but my Great Grandad Robert L Bulbeck owned a butchers at 1st Avenue in Emsworth. I was wondering if anyone knew of it or had pictures? He came from a family of dairy farmers and met his wife a few streets over :)
A memory of Emsworth
Little Church Alverstoke
I was at Alverstoke Childrens Home as a baby (I remember the hospital within the grounds and the beach being near by) till I left at 16 (1960ish - a Mr Thomas was in charge then). I remember a boy then named Oliver... ...Read more
A memory of Alverstoke by
Captions
926 captions found. Showing results 577 to 600.
In the opposite corner is the village school founded by the gift of £180 from a tailor, James Thistleton.
Overton is situated near the Lune Estuary; it is said that a terrace on the main village street uses stone that came from Cockersand Abbey.
All this came to an end with a disastrous fire, and the site is now a pub garden to the Nag's Head with a children's playground.
Each weighs about thirty tons - they possibly came from the quarries at Knaresborough.
Samuel Pepys studied here between 1650 and 1653, and on his death in 1703 his library came here, including the original manuscript volumes of his famous diaries.
Grain and produce came up river from East Yorkshire, while coal, glass products, and minerals were sent from here both to London and the continent.
Many of the Manchester businessmen that settled in Alderley in the mid 19th century came from a Nonconformist background and they often kept up their connections with the city.
This was the main route through the town until the by-pass came into being.
He earned more than local fame when he stayed at his post, transmitting the new 'SOS' signal until the ship sank.
They take place around the war memorial (left, in front of the white building); farmers, merchants and millers came from all areas of Norfolk.
Samuel Pepys studied here between 1650 and 1653, and on his death in 1703 his library came here, including the original manuscript volumes of his famous diaries.
Early visitors came on horseback but a motor train (1905) brought passengers from Prestatyn for 3d.This picture must be one of the best photographs, clearly showing the falls and the well-kept setting
Its majesty was attenuated somewhat when the Great Western Railway line from Wolverhampton to Chester came along and was built even higher.
A newer Shanklin grew up along the seashore to cater for the demands of both visitors and those who came to settle.
When the tower itself came down in about 1912, the tower building continued to be a centre for entertainment.
Perhaps the man who made the bell had other things on his mind when it came to putting in the inscription, as he forgot to invert the words laterally in the mould, and they appear backwards on the finished
Working people usually had one set of clothes for work and another for best, and for a trip to the seaside the best clothes came out of the closet - or the pawn shop.
Then came Mrs Gristwood's bakery shop, which was replaced by Howe & Son, and ultimately by Spurriers.
With the colliery came rows of miners' housing, such as those in Stephenson Street, Bessemer Street, Rennie Street, Davy Street, and Newton Street.
Cookes next door was a printer and stationer selling postcards, and then came A G Metcalfe, a baker with café, and R S Corner, a confectioner.
'Locomotion' was one of the stars of the S&DR centenary celebrations in 1925, though the old girl was not quite herself; her power came from a hidden petrol engine, and the smoke from her chimney was burning
Lewis Carroll in Alice in Wonderland, the origins of the cat are said to go way back in time, and no-one knows where the story of the grinning cat, now always associated with Cheshire, originally came
This type of elegant windmill came into its own during the spring and autumn when the marshes were often full of flood water; during this time it was literally 'all hands to the pump' to ensure the safety
The stone came from a quarry on the estate's land.
Places (4)
Photos (6)
Memories (4575)
Books (1)
Maps (65)