Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Poole, Dorset
- Canford Magna, Dorset
- Broadstone, Dorset
- Sandbanks, Dorset
- South Pool, Devon
- Pool, Cornwall
- Longfleet, Dorset
- Dozmary Pool, Cornwall
- Merley, Dorset
- Canford Cliffs, Dorset
- Rossmore, Dorset
- Waterloo, Dorset
- Hamworthy, Dorset
- Knighton, Dorset (near Wimborne Minster)
- Canford School, Dorset
- Branksome, Dorset
- Branksome Park, Dorset
- Oakdale, Dorset
- Sterte, Dorset
- Bourne Valley, Dorset
- Lower Hamworthy, Dorset
- Parkstone, Dorset
- Lilliput, Dorset
- Creekmoor, Dorset
- Talbot Heath, Dorset
- Oakley, Dorset
- Ashington, Dorset
- Canford Heath, Dorset (near Poole)
- Turbary Common, Dorset
- Hillbourne, Dorset
- Newtown, Dorset (near Poole)
- Lake, Dorset
- Alderney, Dorset
- Bearwood, Dorset
- Wallisdown, Dorset
- Turlin Moor, Dorset
Photos
2,132 photos found. Showing results 41 to 60.
Maps
304 maps found.
Books
3 books found. Showing results 49 to 3.
Memories
1,646 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Dornafield Midsummer Promenade
Totnes Rotary Club invited Heather and Gorse Clog Dancers to entertain at the Dornafield Midsummer Promenade along with other peformers. The weather was dry and cool for a mid-June evening and just right ...Read more
A memory of Two Mile Oak Cross in 2008 by
Clog Morris Dancing At The Babbacombe Festival
A week long programme of events for the Babbacombe Festival included a display of clog morris by the Heather and Gorse Clog Dancers from nearby Combeinteignhead, accompanied by a large band of ...Read more
A memory of St Marychurch in 2008 by
Clifton Park
I used to live in tree-lined Lister Street. All I had to do was climb over the back wall to the rear of my house to get into Clifton Park. I remember Sunday School held at the Bandstand: 'Sunshine Corner always jolly fine, is for ...Read more
A memory of Rotherham in 1940 by
1948 Olympic Games
My father represented Great Britain in the 1948 Olympic Games. He (Thomas Patrick Holt) and his brother John and two sisters were on the swimming team. Unfortunately, Thomas came fourth in his event, as he was struck down with a ...Read more
A memory of Wembley in 1948 by
Broadway Lido.....My Home
Yes.....the Broadway Lidi was my home. I am Stuart Smith, my father Gordon Smith was the first manager (well, they called it superintendent then) at the Lido. We moved there when I was about 3 years old, and lived in a ...Read more
A memory of Bridgwater in 1960 by
Swimming At Reedham Orphanage
I went to Whyteleafe Grammar school. At the time it was an all girls grammar school. We used to go on a coach to swim at Reedham Orphanage. I didn't know how to swim and I can remember to this day, telling Miss ...Read more
A memory of Purley in 1952 by
Boys Swimming At Wilby Lido
From the mid thirties until the building of the new swimming pool in Wellingborough. After the war in the late forties, fifties and sixties, the boys of Wellingborough Grammar School regularly had swimming lessons and their annual swimming gala here. Is this a picture of a swimming lesson?
A memory of Wellingborough in 1952 by
Ice Hockey And Olympic Swimming
During WW2 I went to this venue to watch ice hockey. The teams playing were mainly, if not entirely, teams of Canadian servicemen from various UK stations. The team whose name I remember the best was from Down ...Read more
A memory of Wembley in 1940 by
Cove Farnborough Hants
I was born in Farnborough and lived in Pinehurst Cottages until the age of six. My father, Charles Dunbar was an engineer at The Royal Aircraft Establishment. Later we moved to 166 Keith Lucas Road and later to 16 Fowler Road in ...Read more
A memory of Cove in 1950 by
My Early Years
my memories relate from the very early forties till the early eighties. I was born in Andover in 1937.My mother was a Lambourne and was born in Thruxton in 1903 at Rose cottage which is just to the left of the "George" looking ...Read more
A memory of Thruxton in 1940 by
Captions
404 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
Shore Road (left) and Banks Road (centre) lead from Poole and Lilliput to Sandbanks (far right).
The pool is a heated outdoor pool; the fountain has gone. There is a large caravan site here, and a children's play area. The park caters for cricket, tennis, and bowls, and it has a putting green.
Poole did not become a holiday resort for many years, but retained its importance as a port and merchant centre.
Poole did not become a holiday resort for many years, but retained its importance as a port and merchant centre.
Across Poole Road, the low railing offered easy access to the fields of the Dean's Court Estate. The pub dates back at least to the 18th century, and parts of the building are even older.
Within the last twenty years a new pavilion has been built, a large sports hall added, and an indoor swimming pool provided. Further improvements are planned, including all-weather pitches.
This pool was to the east of the pier. Motor boats can be seen in the foreground but the pool was split in two.
The pool had a length of just over 50 yards and a width of just 20 yards. An earlier bathing pool was built in Exmouth in 1842, offering hot and cold sea water baths.
Close to the quays at Poole is the 18th-century harbour office, once the Old Town House, a club for ships' captains.
It has served visitors to Matlock Bath for 200 years, and is fed by a warm water spring which supplies a basement plunge pool and an outdoor swimming pool.
Its original name was 'Pool', with the 'Welsh' prefix added to distinguish it from Poole in Dorset.
The cellars are situated in one of the oldest parts of town; we see it here on a busy day at the height of Poole's mercantile past.
Wallasey Docks were built on what was known as Wallasey Pool, a once wild and beautiful tidal creek.
The lifeline between Poole and Purbeck, crossing between Sandbanks (right) and Shell Bay (left), is the Floating Bridge.
Yateley Common, one of the largest commons in Hampshire, has long been famous in the area for Wyndham's Pool, an 18th-century fishpond reservoir.
As can be seen, the Eastleigh swimming pool was very popular. Many galas were organised, and schools used it for their swimming training and sports.
Originally known just as Pool, 'Welsh'; was added to differentiate it from the English Poole in Dorset.
The open-air swimming pool in Market Drayton was built in the 1930s; it attracted people from a large area around the town, even from as far away at Stoke on Trent.
Originally the park had an open-air swimming pool. This was filled in during the 1930s and made into a children's paddling pool.
This swimming pool building was designed by Neville Player, who also designed the College across the road. It opened in 1962 and had a capacity for 220 bathers an hour.
Outdoor swimming pools were a feature of the concern for health and fitness in the 1930s.
Poole's population grew substantially during the 20th century as new industries arrived to supplement the declining merchant trade.
The paddling pool in front of it is a precursor of the modern day Sun Centre, perhaps. The coats and the empty pool reveal few takers for its delights – it must be a cold day.
A pool left behind on the sands by the falling tide makes an ideal paddling place for holidaying children.
Places (61)
Photos (2132)
Memories (1646)
Books (3)
Maps (304)