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 541 to 560.
Maps
27 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 649 to 2.
Memories
488 memories found. Showing results 271 to 280.
Growing Up In Greenford 72 86
Brought up from age 7 Lived at 9 ferrymead gardens directly opposite holy cross church. Used to watch all the Saturday weddings and the cherry blossom along the middle verges. Schooled at Bethams, coston girls ...Read more
A memory of Greenford by
Re Dochgarroch
It is said that we all have a Guardian Angel, myself and my good friend Jimmy Fraser certainly had one 58 years ago. At a Hallowe'en party in the Dochgarroch hall in 1954 (I was 7 years old), it got a bit stuffy so I went ...Read more
A memory of Dochgarroch in 1954 by
King Richards Road
We moved from Willesden in London to Kingrichards Road, Leicester when I was 5 yrs old in 1965. I went to King Richards Infants with my brother, Wayne. The building I think was something to do with a church, I think, an old ...Read more
A memory of Leicester in 1965 by
My Childhood Memories Of Caswell Bay
I apparently spent my early years during WW1 in the Mumbles where my mother came from. She had moved to London before the war to find work and married a Londoner. Our holidays when I was a child (in the ...Read more
A memory of Caswell Bay in 1950 by
What A Size
Summer time, I had gone fishing on Royston Canal. The local fishing club had replenished the canal with fresh water trout for the anglers. These fish were so tame that all you need do was to hold out your hand with a few ...Read more
A memory of Royston in 1969 by
Thorne As I Remember
So much and so little time; Green Top Primary School, happy days before the big move up to the Grammar School or North Eastern Road Secondary Boys. Mr Morris for metal work, Mr Snow for woodwork. Mr Colin Ella for religious ...Read more
A memory of Thorne by
Bike Shop
I had my first bike from the bike shop in Byfleet. First I rode around on a second hand bike which was just a bit too big for me and I rode it up and down Rutson Road and Unwin Avenue (I think). Then for my tenth birthday I got a Raleigh ...Read more
A memory of Byfleet in 1957 by
The Old Boad Inn
Does anybody remember the Boad Inn canal side Golds Hill in the 1930s? I was born there in 1946 - it was no longer a pub then. I had many happy times there as a small boy, I had all the open fields to play in. On the canals ...Read more
A memory of West Bromwich in 1951 by
Re Betty Harris Memory
I was in Mrs Waddington's class at Wath Park Road from 1946 - 1950 and I have many happy memories of her. She was a great english teacher, always a happy smiling face, and she spoke of her daughter Betty many ...Read more
A memory of Wath Upon Dearne in 1948 by
Manvers. Old Big Yard Housing
My family and I lived in the old houses along the canal, there was a large archway leading into what we called the big yard, I was very small and can still remember the smell of the coal trains as we stood on ...Read more
A memory of Wath Upon Dearne in 1956 by
Captions
720 captions found. Showing results 649 to 672.
In 1890 the canal (in the foreground) still carried some traffic. 'Butterow', incidentally, is the more modern spelling of the village where the picture was taken.
Brindley originally wanted to bring his canal to the Severn at Bewdley, but the locals there objected to the very idea of such a 'stinking ditch'.
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 schooner anchored here, awaiting high tide to allow it to enter the canal, is the 'President Garfield'. The lifeboat is the third one to be stationed at Bude, the 'Elizabeth Moore Garden 2'.
Telford was the County Surveyor for Shropshire at the time, and was associated with the building of roads and also of bridges, canals and aqueducts, to name just a few of his projects.
Constructed by Telford and Jessop to link the rivers Severn, Dee and Mersey, the Llangollen Canal is one of the most popular waterways in the country.
The wooden bridge was built in 1827 to take the canal towpath over to millrace.
Swans and ducks live in the canal basin.
In the late 19th century, many workers from Holland were attracted to this land of canals and windmills as skilled peat workers.
The Anderton Boat Lift at Northwich was built in 1875, providing a link between the Weaver Navigation and the Trent & Mersey Canal.
upriver, above London Bridge, were the more modest colliers, whose simple barges, loaded by man-power, carried consignments on to Thameside towns, for shipment to the Midlands and the north through the canal
The Grand Union Canal was extended from Leicester to Market Harborough via the dramatic locks at Foxton in 1809.
The 19th century brought many labourers to Cliffe, who worked on the Strood canal or the cement works. The Victorian Black Bull pub (centre) is now a renowned Thai restaurant.
The completion of Turf Lock in 1830 enabled vessels to enter the canal and proceed up to Exeter regardless of the state of the tide; the maximum dimensions possible were 122ft x 25ft x 10.5ft.
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 Mersey schooner is heading for Spike Island and the St Helen's Canal just behind it. Our photograph was taken from the Transporter Bridge, which stood at the crossing point for over fifty years.
Though the official title of the docks was the Docks of the Manchester Ship Canal Company, they were mostly in Salford, with parts even in Stretford.
In 1810 the Severn & Wye Railway Company developed Lydney Harbour, constructing the canal, dock basin and lock gates we see in the photograph.
The Grantham-Nottingham Canal of 1793 runs through the parish, and a wharf once served the village.
The Grantham-Nottingham Canal of 1793 runs through the parish, and a wharf once served the village.
Corpach is where the Caledonian Canal joins with Loch Linnhe and the route to the sea. In the background, to the south-east, is Ben Nevis.
An expansive village, it sits on the River Devon, about a mile north of the Grantham Canal of 1797. This view looks south, away from the church.
Wealthy mill owners and industrialists found it handy to leave their boats in the shelter of the dock or the canal basin, and leisure became more and more a source of income for Glasson Dock.
At Tarleton Lock the river Douglas meets the Leeds and Liverpool Canal. Harry Mayor was lock keeper here for forty-seven years.
Places (3)
Photos (1193)
Memories (488)
Books (2)
Maps (27)