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Maps
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163 books found. Showing results 6,601 to 6,624.
Memories
22,900 memories found. Showing results 2,751 to 2,760.
Ystalyfera 1940
I'm probably the oldest person writing on this site!! Just after the war started in 1939 I was sent down to live with my aunt in Ystalyfera because we lived in London which wasn't safe. My aunt was Dora Rees and she and my ...Read more
A memory of Ystalyfera in 1940
Best Holiday Ever !
My family come from the East End of London. My mum and dad took us on holiday from Chingford on a Grey Green coach to Stoke Fleming for two weeks, we stopped en route in Yeovil for tea.... My parents had booked a caravan ...Read more
A memory of Stoke Fleming in 1956 by
Stan And Hilda
After a hard days playing English and Germans in the Heuffy Wood, coming home for our tea ,if we where really thirsty we called at Stan and Hilda's for a cool drink of water - we where always welcome. Once or twice we saw Stan ...Read more
A memory of Ebchester in 1959 by
Growing Up In Wonderland
In the mid and late forties I attended Kingsmuir Boarding School in what is known today as Alderford Grange. It was owned and mastered by Ms Francis. We were told that the building had once been the Inn attached ...Read more
A memory of Sible Hedingham in 1945 by
Bareham Family
My Great grandfather Thomas Bareham lived at the Veldt Cottage which was next door to the Red Lion pub.He was also church warden at Great Holland Parish Church where he was well liked and respected. Although I live in Ipswich, I visit Great Holland and Clacton quite often.
A memory of Great Holland in 1930 by
Number 5 The Green
My mother Ruth Hadlow lived at number 5 (even though it was the first cottage - should be number 1) memories of visiting my grandad there until he moved in the late eighties. The house next door used to be the old police ...Read more
A memory of Littlebourne in 1968 by
The Railway Station At Boat Of Garten
The Speyside Steam Railway is a Heritage Railway which runs from Aviemore to Boat of Garten. I visited in May 2010 with my wife Elizabeth and sister-in-law Margaret on an organised railway touring ...Read more
A memory of Boat of Muiresk in 2010 by
Memories
My mother Gwen Clayden worked at the Ritz cinema during the war years, and spent many evenings on the roof doing fire watch. As a teenager in the mid sixties I remember many shops along Darkes Lane including Woolworths opening (in the ...Read more
A memory of Potters Bar
Fleetwood, Miniature Railway C1955
The miniature railway was built by a Mr Dove and his family and I know this as they stayed at my parents hotel, The Fairhaven, and we had parts of the trains in the garage. Mr Dove and his family came from the Derbyshire area.
A memory of Fleetwood in 1955 by
The Jetty, River Plant
January 1977. The rain was almost horizontal that day, ice cold too, as I walked towards the hut at the delivery wharf of the Ford River Plant in Dagenham, Essex, I thought to myself that it really could not be any worse ...Read more
A memory of Dagenham in 1977 by
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 6,601 to 6,624.
This view looks south-westwards from Broad Ledge to Long Ledge (foreground) below Gun Cliff to the Guildhall (top right), the Fossil Depot beside Buddle Bridge and the Assembly Rooms (centre), with the
The man on the left stands still for the photographer. He is dressed in the typical attire of the day; hats and braces were a common sight at this time. Will the cows head straight on or turn right?
A herd of Shorthorn cattle is driven down the main street of West Witton, which stands at the eastern entrance to Wensleydale.
St Leonard's church at Bengeo, probably the oldest building in the Hertford area, dates from the 12th century.
Situated in Heath Road, Wirral Grammar School for Boys was officially opened on 26 September 1931, at the same time as an almost identical building, Wirral Grammar School for Girls, was opened round the
This fine church in Wallasey Village is also known locally as the Harrison Memorial Church, because it was built as a memorial by the Harrison children for their parents, James and June Harrison.
From Saxon times Feckenham was the administrative centre for the Forest of Feckenham, which once covered most of north Worcestershire.
The farmhouse has some lovely details to the timber frame and some original pargetting; the small oriel window at the gable end was blocked when a modern chimney was built into an end room.
The weir is at the junction of the roads to Chatteris and Ramsey. The manor of Warboys was held by the Cromwell family until 1622, when it was sold to Sir John Leman, Lord Mayor of London in 1616.
To the right is the fresh new Triumph Herald 1200 coupe. It had a 25-foot turning circle. The A31 runs through the village, which stands between Farnham and Alton.
The fencing on either side of the river has now been painted white. In the distance, the telegraph pole and phone box have been removed.
This road is the main shopping street in Fleet, and it contains a mixture of architecture from Victorian to modern.
The village shop beyond remains, and so does Emmett's grocer's and draper's at the far white gable.
The crossroads pictured here are on the Woodchurch Road near Prenton.
St Katherine's Chapel was part of the complex which formed Warrington Teachers' Training College.
On the left is a fountain commemorating Queen Victoria, and on the right is a monument to Warrington soldiers of the South Lancashire Regiment killed in the Boer War.
The celebrated Knightwood Oak is pictured here at a time when its girth was already over 17 feet.
The recent history of the ancient village of East Keswick is inextricably linked with the fortunes of the nearby 'big house' of Harewood.
A university was officially established at Durham in 1657 during the Commonwealth, but it was suppressed following the Restoration. Durham was finally granted its university in 1832.
With the Castle and the Saxon church of St.
A police officer keeps a close eye on traffic at the foot of Preston Street, with the International Stores displaying its selection of groceries in its corner window, and the printers and stationer's shop
It looks quiet here now, but once the market at Leominster was so successful that the cities of Hereford and Worcester were jealous of its success.
A pleasure cruiser has lowered its mast to enable it to pass under the stone and brick bridge with its wide central arch and two pointed side arches.
Close to the county boundary with Buckinghamshire and Bedfordshire, the unusually-named village of Bozeat was at the heart of a thriving weaving industry 600 years ago; the Weavers' Guild donated a rich
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