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Maps
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163 books found. Showing results 7,585 to 7,608.
Memories
22,900 memories found. Showing results 3,161 to 3,170.
My Army Day,S
I was a National Service Concript , January 1947 . ( Coldest Winter for years ) . I was posted to Lydd camp with the 30th Light Ack Ack , Regiment Royal Artillery . 18yrs of age . When I saw Romney Marsh on the Postings Board . I was ...Read more
A memory of Lydd in 1947 by
Coronation Year At Cresswell
The actual day of the Coronation it rained, not only in London but also at the village of Cresswell, home of my mother's family for several Centuries. The rain didn't bother us as we spent most of the day in the ...Read more
A memory of Cresswell in 1953 by
Matinee Mayhem
Aged seven I would join the queue outside the cinema each Saturday morning for the children's matinee accompanied by an older cousin. Once the doors were opened we were ushered in by a man with a voice like a sergeant major,he ...Read more
A memory of Newbiggin in 1951 by
Princess Pier.
When I was a Young Man, in th Fifties. I used to fish of this Pier. But I have a Terrible Memory, of the Wimen and Kids crying, as the ships orTenders took Men off to the USA and Canada, I didn't know it at the time, But I was all ...Read more
A memory of Greenock by
School And Work In Fareham
I attended Fareham Secondary School at Southampton and Harrison Roads from 1950 to 1954. Then I started work as an apprentice at Croker and Farrell, who was the Ford dealer, which was situated right next to Trinity ...Read more
A memory of Fareham in 1959 by
James Mullin
Started school at Dreghorn school and left school 1958.Stayed in Dreghorn until 1968.
A memory of Dreghorn in 1948 by
Uxbridge In The 50s&60s
I remember going to Whitehall junior school and then spend half a year at Greenway school before we moved to Surrey all my friends lived around Uxbridge I would like to know if anyone remember me my friends were Keith Benn ...Read more
A memory of Uxbridge in 1960 by
Old Days
I met my wife who lived in huberton a little village about a mile up the lane from sowerby, back in 1970 . We married and lived at Dean lane paying 10/6d a week for a back to back one up and one down where my son came into the world . I ...Read more
A memory of Sowerby by
Brentford
What wonderful memories of Brentford. My name was Dorothy Pearce I lived in Netley Road with sisters Beryl and Hazel and brothers Richard and Philip. My Nan lived in Potteery Road next door to Edie Joyce. The Shepherds lived ...Read more
A memory of Brentford in 1943 by
Happy Times At Holcombe Devon
My Gran and Grandpa had a cottage in Holcombe Village "shrimp Cottage" at the top of the hill. This cottage was later left to me, but I sold it in the 60s during the slump!!! I have some wonderful ...Read more
A memory of Holcombe in 1958 by
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 7,585 to 7,608.
Founded in 1132, Fountains was given large tracts of land on which to raise sheep.
Bourne, at the junction where two Roman roads met, had a Roman station to guard the Car Dyke, the great Roman dyke 56 miles long and still surviving for long stretches.
Nowadays its popular, quiet tree-fringed length carries canal boats refurbished for tourists. Richard Turner, one of the temperance leaders, was born in Bilsborrow.
The Council Offices are on the right, bearing a datestone of 1913. Before that date, meetings of the Garstang Rural District Council were held at the King's Arms Hotel.
A three-storey pier jetty enabled passengers to embark or disembark at all stages of the tide when the pleasure steamer 'Winnie' made trips to Southport.
This well-known manor house was built by Sir William Fermor during the reign of Henry VII. Other families who lived here were the Calthorpes and Le Stranges.
To this day, Hurstbourne Tarrant remains the quintessential English village.
Although somewhat overshadowed by Pontcysyllte Aqueduct, the beautifully proportioned Chirk Aqueduct ranks as a major work in its own right.
On the village green, the memorial is mounted on to the pedestal of an old cross. The church of St Cuthbert is dedicated to that saint as he is thought to have stayed in the hamlet.
Behind the lychgate at the end of Manor Road rises the flint and stone tower of Holy Trinity parish church.
The Coach and Horses is one of Wimborne's oldest pubs, and the only one to have retained its thatched roof to this day.
This hamlet is to the south of Boxford and separated from it since 1975 by the bypass.
Children play on the beach and collect flotsam from the tide line while their parents sit beside windbreaks. The roof on the fish palace has now almost completely gone.
These ships are topsail schooners and what might be an inside or outside Tamar barge at Calstock, 17 miles up-river from the sea.
'A picturebook castle' is how the castle at Hornby has been described. Painted by the artist Turner, it became famous and was much visited.
One of the most memorable images in the entire Frith archive, this intimate shot of the Cobb wall was inspired by Jane Austen and Alfred, Lord Tennyson.
James Hargreaves was connected with Robert Peel through helping him to introduce mechanical processes at Brookside Mill, so it was appropriate that the James Hargreaves memorial should be
The 'bus station next to the library and museum has moved – and so has the library. The privet fence around the green has gone, and the grass has been replaced.
The network of canals developed mainly in the 18th century before the arrival of the railway.
The bridge across the Ouse at St Ives was built in medieval times.
The attractive stone built village stands on high undulating ground some four miles north-east of Oakham.
Whilst the High Street is a shadow of its former self, the Rose & Crown Hotel, located at the junction with the Market Place, is enjoying somewhat of a renaissance, with its current owners investing
The 'bus station next to the library and museum has moved – and so has the library. The privet fence around the green has gone, and the grass has been replaced.
Though it passes through an industrial landscape, this canal has many quiet rural stretches where the narrow boats chug along under a dense canopy of green.
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