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Photos
12 photos found. Showing results 501 to 12.
Maps
9,582 maps found.
Books
29 books found. Showing results 601 to 624.
Memories
4,582 memories found. Showing results 251 to 260.
Alcombe School
This is a very exciting discovery for me because it is one of the oldest photographs I have seen of a part of old Alcombe that I can recognise, even at my great distance from the UK. My Great-Grandfather, George Mildon had a school ...Read more
A memory of Alcombe in 1880 by
The Mills
It is interesting to hear from some one who lived so close to me when I was little. We lived up from the high mill in hope cottage. My father Robert Stroud worked at the really awful mill most of his life for almost nothing. Mr ...Read more
A memory of Shaw Mills by
A Holiday Of Note
I can't pinpoint the year exactly, but it was definitely a year or two before 1953 which was the year I left the UK. I and three friends, student nurses at a hospital in Essex, decided on a holiday in Scotland. We chose Dollarbeg ...Read more
A memory of Dollar in 1951 by
Berwick Road C Of E School
I started at Berwick Road C of E School in 1957 together with some of the people referred to in the other memories ie: Heather Wallis, Christopher Bennior, Lorraine Staton. There were others obviously such as Margot ...Read more
A memory of Little Sutton in 1957 by
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
Growing Up In Milford
My mother was in the WAAFs during WWII. She met my father (an American G.I.) at a dance in Henley. They married in 1944 and after the war, my mother traveled to the United States as a war bride. I was born in Nebraska in ...Read more
A memory of Milford by
Happy Days
I, Allen Rix, was born and grew up in Jersey Marine from 1933 to 1951 when I left to join the RAF. Living through World War 2 was hard for a lot of people but for us it was a gat time, even though we had to endure the bombing of ...Read more
A memory of Jersey Marine by
From The Pews Of The Church In Kilinian To Pioneers In Colonial Australia. The Patterson Clan.
The Church at Kilinian during the 18th and 19th century, if not earlier, was a Celtic Presbyterian Church where my ancestors, the Patterson and McClean ...Read more
A memory of Kilninian by
America Woods
I lived in the house called Abbotsford in about 1934 which to this day, stands by the side of the America Woods. Once a year, the scouts would camp in the field at the back of the house. I spent many happy times playing in those ...Read more
A memory of Shanklin by
A Claim To Fame!
My paternal grandparents, by the name of Goodliffe, lived in a house called The Robins, on Old House Road, Balsham. (Both of which are still there, although the house has been extended somewhat and modernised. Mind you, it ...Read more
A memory of Balsham in 1962 by
Captions
1,673 captions found. Showing results 601 to 624.
Both the Town Hall, the stone building on the right, and the Bolton Hotel on the left, are still here today.
Another view that clearly shows the 1883 promenade and sea wall. Before this was built, the beach stretched much further inland and sand dunes often formed as far as Regent Street.
There are no traffic lights here yet - it was to be another ten years before they appeared. Life was simpler for learner drivers then.
A mother is attending to two youngsters, while another child crosses from the boat to the dinghy, a potentially hazardous leap. That was 1965: today the wearing of a lifejacket would be automatic.
Not far distant from the Slaughters are the little villages of Lower and Upper Swell, both situated in an entrancing rural landscape along the banks of the River Dikler.
The Oxfam poster both pre-empts the later popularity of charity-shopping, and also displays an effective line in ironic copywriting. Fading into the distance is the high ground of Thorndon Park.
This gently curving street is to the east of the town. This view, looking back towards the town centre, shows both the Congregational and parish churches.
There is a wonderful mixture of timber-framed, Georgian and Victorian buildings here, which line both sides of the road.
Both privately owned, they later sold out to a major brewery that joined them together in May 1989.
This delightful mill is to be found on the River Blackwater. Few can pass over the hump-backed bridge without pausing to get a better view.
Eckington is another north-east Derbyshire town which formerly depended on the collieries which surrounded it, but which now is finding a new focus as a commuter town for Chesterfield and Sheffield.
On the right is the Cliffe post office, with a pillar box outside. The Black Bull pub (centre) was another property of the Maidstone brewers Style & Winch.
The Hope was one of the many inns and pubs that lined the course of the canal, at one time or another.
Another view from Castle Hill, this time looking west. In the bottom left corner is the tramway that brought ball clay from Peters Marland to the station at Torrington (centre).
The Thames is not sufficiently wide at Oxford for the conventional kind of race in which one boat, known as an eight, overtakes another.
All Saints' Church stands proudly at the top of a sharp double bend and hill on the A607 road going towards Lincoln from Grantham.
Because the River Cam itself is not wide enough for conventional races, races called 'Bumps' are held.
Note the telegraph poles on the left, once a regular sight alongside canals.
An old village on the Cheshire side of the Manchester Ship Canal, Flixton was developed as a residential suburb of Manchester.
The house on the corner of Montrose Street to the left is now another medical centre, with a dental surgery next door.
Because the River Cam itself is not wide enough for conventional races, races called 'Bumps' are held.
Here we see another restful feature in the Valley Gardens, but this is a later design. The area was originally a croquet lawn, established in 1864.
Speedwell Cavern, at the foot of the Winnats Pass, is another of Castleton's famous show caves.
The Jew’s House is another of Lincoln’s surviving early medieval stone houses: the city has more than most.
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