Places
3 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
1,193 photos found. Showing results 521 to 540.
Maps
27 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 625 to 2.
Memories
488 memories found. Showing results 261 to 270.
Memories, Stirred
Have just stumbled on this site and the entries about Worksop and Carlton have stirred a few memories. I lived in Worksop from 1956 to 1979. Shops: MacFisheries, an old fashioned W H Smith. Machin's hardware, the brilliant C V ...Read more
A memory of Worksop in 1970 by
Early Years
We moved to Watford in 1943. My war time memories are of night after night in the shelters, the "doodle bugs" and the boys playing Germans and soldiers on the bomb site next door. My special memories are of Cassiobury Park where we used to ...Read more
A memory of Watford by
My Childhood Heaven
In the late 1800's my Grandmother's sister, Minnie came from Bristol to work at Goytre House. She was soon followed by another sister Hannah and my grandmother Annie both of whom worked at Maesyberrin, the doctor's house in Goytre village. ...Read more
A memory of Goytre by
Aspinal Primary And Ryder Brow Secondary
I was at Aspinal county Primary School in Gorton, there was a terrible teacher there who wore clogs and used to rap our knuckles. I remember my best friend Jennifer Johnson, who lived near the Rota cinema. ...Read more
A memory of Gorton by
Just The Top Place To Grow Up In!
I was born in Stairfoot in 1949, and it was a great village to grow up in. loads of friends, the Langleys and numerous others, We played out for hours on end going to Oxleys fish and chip shop and of course Curly ...Read more
A memory of Stairfoot by
Swindon 1957 To 1966
We moved to Swindon in 1957 from London (Wimbledon, actually) when my dad, a skilled engineer, got a job at Vickers Armstrongs at South Marston, with a brand new council house thrown in. In those post-war austerity days there was ...Read more
A memory of Swindon by
Village School
I moved to chigwell row when I was 4 and a half years old ,we had been living in army qauters and for the last year been staying with family till we got housed in chigwell row it was may time I can all ways remember it felt like ...Read more
A memory of Chigwell Row by
Good Times
Between the years of 1955 and 1963 except for a 2 yr stint in Australia We lived on and off at my grandfathers house at 107 Bourneside Road 2nd house from end of road; as kids we climbed over fence to get to the mill pond for non permit ...Read more
A memory of Addlestone by
Coxes Mill Pond
I lived on and off at between 1953-1963 my grandfathers house 107 Bourneside Rd, 2nd house from the end, Ramsey family, I rember fun on coxes mill pond, climbing over the black metal fence fishing without permit on pond or canal,trying to walk the weir playing on the lock
A memory of Addlestone by
Findern Village
I went to live in Findern in 1967,my first home after getting married in Crewe in Cheshire. My then husband and I had got jobs at Rolls Royce in Derby. I have very fond memories of the village then. We lived in a newish three ...Read more
A memory of Findern in 1967 by
Captions
720 captions found. Showing results 625 to 648.
Now quieter, thanks to a bypass, it once had a wharf on the Grand Junction Canal which passed a quarter of a mile north of the village.
The locks and docks at Eastham form the western end of the Manchester Ship Canal.
His model village provided all the essential living amenities, and for recreation he provided a spacious park on the opposite side of the river and canal.
James Brindley created this successful canal in 1772. It was a vital part of the Grand Cross network that linked the rivers Trent, Servern, Thames and Mersey.
Nowadays its popular, quiet tree-fringed length carries canal boats refurbished for tourists. Richard Turner, one of the temperance leaders, was born in Bilsborrow.
Built between 1796 and 1801 at a cost of £20,898, the aqueduct carries the canal 70 feet above the River Ceiriog for a distance of 710 feet.
His model village provided all the essential living amenities, and for recreation he provided a spacious park on the opposite side of the river and canal.
Blackburn had started to expand with the canal age.Then, in 1797, its first turnpike opened, connecting it with Bolton.
The Bridgewater Canal flows through the pretty town of Lymm in Cheshire. An empty pair of boats (the one in front is the 'Clio') head towards Manchester, probably to collect coal.
A ditch ran alongside the building until the 1850s, which was intended to link Southampton with the Andover Canal and the River Test.This used to be the home of the town gunner, with the guns and
It involved the excavation and removal of 48 million cubic yds of earth, the building of a tidal lock at Eastham, and of four other sets of locks to raise the canal sixty feet above sea level
Not only did the coming of the canal vastly lower distribution costs for the industrial towns of Yorkshire, it also provided a localised transport service for the towns and cities through which it passed
This was just one lock in the long climb from the west edge of London up the Chilterns: there were 25 miles and 42 locks on the Grand Junction Canal (later to become part of the Grand Union), the original
Not only did the coming of the canal vastly lower distribution costs for the industrial towns of Yorkshire, it also provided a localised transport service for the towns and cities through which it passed
The coming of firstly the Grand Union Canal and then the railways, led to the establishment of modern Linslade at its present location.
The parkland of 18th-century Welton Place sweeps south to the north bank of the Grand Union Canal, in its cutting leading to the east portal of the Braunston Tunnel.
The Bude Canal was opened in 1826 from this harbour basin, with a sea lock just visible in the distance.
Our photographer is standing on Doctors Bridge over the Bridgewater Canal, and High Street runs left and right from the top of the square.
The owners of the nearby Grand Union Canal bought the mill around 1820, installing a steam engine, but after about 1900 all milling seems to have ceased.
In 1792, a company was formed by Lancaster merchants to build a canal; they saw it as a way of getting cheap coal from Wigan and transporting other goods out into towns in the heart of Lancashire.
The cavern's unique feature is a 750yd underground canal.
These locks are so close together that in order to maintain a satisfactory supply of water, it was necessary to extend the canal at the left-hand side above each chamber.
Though William was himself a farmer, he was also a land surveyor, property developer and investor in canals. He obtained Syerston in 1792 when he bought 500 acres from Lewis Fytche for £12,375.
The sunken car park (left) and the railings (right) provide a visible clue to the course of the old canal tunnel.
Places (3)
Photos (1193)
Memories (488)
Books (2)
Maps (27)