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Photos
12 photos found. Showing results 601 to 12.
Maps
9,582 maps found.
Books
29 books found. Showing results 721 to 744.
Memories
4,582 memories found. Showing results 301 to 310.
School Days
I started Finchampstead school in 1953.There were 3 class rooms each with a cloak room,a girls toilet block ,be it only 3 toilet cubicles for us children and one for the teachers and boys block but I never entered that and so know ...Read more
A memory of Finchampstead by
Family Of Ewj Moloney, Lancing Solicitor D 1978
I was part of the St James the Less Players, the Parish church drama group, which started my career on the boards. The Downs,The Manor, The Park, The Clump, The Chalkpit..The Woods The Beach..were ...Read more
A memory of Lancing by
Beanz Dreamz...
Our family moved to Friars Road in the summer of 66, from a damp house in Boothen Green, which looked over toward the Michelin Factory. I was 5 years old. My father Graham was a former art student at Burslem College of Art under the ...Read more
A memory of Abbey Hulton by
Grocers? 2166 Coventry Road
Hi there. This isn't so much a memory of my own. More that I'm hoping to jog someone else's memory.... I have a unique little vehicle (Hillman Imp pick-up) and the logbook shows it was owned by a Mr R Adams of 2166 ...Read more
A memory of Sheldon by
Church Path, Mitcham And The People That Lived There
I was born in Collierswood Maternity Home, a very short time before it was bombed during the Second World War. The year was 1944. My family being homeless were housed in requisitioned properties in ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham in 1944 by
My Childhood In Coldharbour
In July 1959, I was born at home, to Eric and Ann Shields in Coldharbour village. My father was the village policeman; we lived in what was then the police house, which was situated next to the village shop opposite ...Read more
A memory of Coldharbour in 1959 by
Fish & Chips In Brightlingsea
During the late 40's and 50's we all travelled to Jaywick Sands for our summer and bank holidays and on the weekends made regular excursions to the nearby seaside resorts of Frinton and Walton-on-the Nase but my ...Read more
A memory of Brightlingsea by
100 Melody Road. Wandsworth S.W.18
In 1943/4 My mother, brother and myself were bombed out of our home in Summerly Street. In that house we had a Morrison shelter and the night the bomb hit, a few houses away from our house, it affected our shelter ...Read more
A memory of Wandsworth by
Phil Munton
Hi, I've recently discovered this while doing research on a book I am writing and was interested to hear how many people from Selsdon remember their childhood and, in most cases, enjoyed the village as I knew it as a good place to grow ...Read more
A memory of Selsdon by
Cheslyn Hay 1960 1977
My parents moved from Essington to Cheslyn Hay in 1960. We briefly lived in one of the cottages in Hollybush before moving to Low Street. I remember Harry Bates selling fruit & veg from his horse & cart and people ...Read more
A memory of Cheslyn Hay by
Captions
1,673 captions found. Showing results 721 to 744.
New buildings flank it on both sides, that on the right housing a discount bookshop.
Here we see the North or Marine Lake about ten years after it opened. In the centre background is a windmill, which was situated on the top of the boathouse.
The events prompted the bucolic rhyme “Chelmsford church and Writtle steeple both fell down, but killed no people”.
Shopkeepers were not long in seeing the business potential of catering for both residents and tourists.
Late morning concerts were held both at the Crescent and the Winter Gardens.
Another view of Church Lane, with some older cottages along with some rural gardens, just the kind one may expect to see in the country.
Its position on the north-west corner of Finborough Road was handy for both Earl's Court Station and West Brompton Station. One of the posters outside is an appeal for lead foil silver paper.
Bedford Street is another road that disappeared from the map following the blitz.
Note their gables and dormers, and their first floor balconies affording that envied view to the sea.These family homes are now all hotels of one sort or another.
It is to the credit of generations of Romford councillors, developers and benefactors that the borough has so many avenues of fine mature trees.
This was a year that saw another important step in establishing Dover as one of the world's busiest ports.
The nearby churchyard contains the graves of the writer's sister and mother, both of whom were named Cassandra. John Hinton, rector here for 58 years, is commemorated inside.
Pelham Road runs all the way through the town; it is now built up on both sides of the road. The vehicles are up-to-date - a new Austin A30 van is delivering to the shop on the left.
Raglan was not divided into wards but into two courts, the Stone and the Fountain.
Netley, on the east bank of Southampton Water, was another of Henry VIII's coastal forts, though this one was a conversion of an existing building, the gatehouse of Netley Abbey.
The filling station still exists, and there is another one opposite. The road layout has been radically improved.
Harcombe runs roughly parallel to Yawl; it is another long combe running north from the main valley of the River Lim.
Another view of the mountain taken from across the valley with a very small man-made reservoir in the immediate foreground.
This is another view that still looks much the same a century on. The delightful pub on the right is now a newsagents, and mr Acland's business is no more.
The ancient village of Lancing, now by-passed by the A27, is swallowed up by suburban sprawl which is continuous south to the sea.
Serving both a rural area round about, and hundreds of overseas ports by way of trade, Plymouth reached its mercantile heyday in Victorian times.
Two landmarks oppose one another on a busy route from the railway station.
The miniature railway at Cofton Wood was nearly as popular as the tea room, though one cannot help wondering if the adults in this picture are not just the teeniest bit embarrassed.
Another national figure was Dewsbury's only MP to become a Cabinet Minister. Walter Runciman, the Liberal MP, headed the Education Board in 1908 and was at the Board of Trade in 1914.
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