Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- New Row, Dyfed
- Forest Row, Sussex
- Chigwell Row, Essex
- Low Row, Yorkshire
- Middleton One Row, Durham
- Red Row, Northumberland
- Collier Row, Essex
- Stoke Row, Oxfordshire
- Row, Cumbria (near Kendal)
- Row, Cornwall
- Row, Cumbria (near Langwathby)
- Authorpe Row, Lincolnshire
- Corner Row, Lancashire
- Medhurst Row, Kent
- Spooner Row, Norfolk
- The Rowe, Staffordshire
- Tittle Row, Berkshire
- Winkfield Row, Berkshire
- Higher Row, Dorset
- Heather Row, Hampshire
- Helmington Row, Durham
- Rotten Row, Berkshire
- North Row, Cumbria
- Alder Row, Somerset
- Frost Row, Norfolk
- Smokey Row, Buckinghamshire
- Shiplake Row, Oxfordshire
- Row Green, Essex
- Row Heath, Essex
- West Row, Suffolk
- Tottenhill Row, Norfolk
- Will Row, Lincolnshire
- Ulcat Row, Cumbria
- Billy Row, Durham
- Beck Row, Suffolk
- Broadland Row, Sussex
Photos
711 photos found. Showing results 621 to 640.
Maps
566 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,283 memories found. Showing results 311 to 320.
General History Contacts And Contributions Welcome
William Evans born 1843 in Llanelli, Camarthen Wales moved to Bedlington Northumberland in 1861 and married Mabel Bell, in 1863. They first lived at the Barrington Colliery with their young ...Read more
A memory of Seaton Delaval in 1860 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
Return To Aveley With Glenda
Hello Glenda, my dear. I remember that name - Lighten. Where is Eastern Ave? Is it the road where Trevor Johnson and David Warren lived? Michael Cox there too. Remember him? Now I remember our dads - good mates - ...Read more
A memory of Aveley in 1940 by
Memories Of Wellfield Road Streatham
I was born at 114 Wellfield Road, the home of my Nan and Grandad, Dorothy and George Osborne. My Mum and Dad, Phyllis and Bert Davis moved over the road to 173 Wellfield Road with my 3 brothers, Terry ...Read more
A memory of Streatham in 1954 by
Heeley
I am trying to find Photographs, Drawings, or Paintings of the houses and if possible the Old Farm Cottages opposite the Heeley Parish Church on Gleadless Rd. Heeley. They consisted of a block of 4 bay windowed terraced houses, numbered from ...Read more
A memory of Heeley in 1956 by
Farndon Ferry
the ferry was run by Charles Edward Saxby until his death in 1959. It was then taken over by Sidney Clarke until approx. 1968. In the floods of 1963/4 we couldn't cross the river and had to row across the fields to Rolleston ...Read more
A memory of Newark-on-Trent
Cement Works Holborough Road
I too went to Holmesdale secondary, it was called Snodland Secondary when I first went there. My Dad and Grandfather, Peter and Henry Buss both worked as lorry drivers at the cement works and we lived in a factory ...Read more
A memory of Snodland in 1964 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
Boating On This Lake Seemed Quite Dangerous....
I well remember the rowing boats on the lake in Beddington Park. One end of the lake seemed quite dark and sinister, whilst the other was open and safe. I remember creaky oar locks and wooden hulls, and ...Read more
A memory of Beddington by
Memories Of Fenny Stratford
My mother, Florrie Rollings, was born on April 23rd 1891 in one of a small row of cottages, now demolished at the A5 end of Victoria Road. I had many aunts and uncles both in Fenny and in Bletchley. My mother's ...Read more
A memory of Fenny Stratford by
Captions
827 captions found. Showing results 745 to 768.
The landscape of hills, bar- rows and earthworks remind us of the beginnings of civilisation with the Neolithic, Bronze Age and Iron Age settlements and hill forts.
If he happened to be on leave in wartime, Peter took the nurses across by rowing boat or by shire horse and cart, together with a churn of fresh milk!
On the left is the Swan Inn, on the right is Graball Row. as to make it easier to carry away stone from the castle.
To the right of the column in the background is Commutation Row, which was built and named to celebrate the repeal of the window tax. Sad to say, it is now all cleared away for a modern building.
It is identical to Club Row in Longridge, which only came about through the tenacity of twenty Lancashire quarry workers who saved up and built the terrace.
Henley had latched on to the newly-fashionable sport of rowing; this preceded the later Victorian boom, which also enthused the lower middle classes with their increased leisure and spending money
This scheme caused dismay beyond the confines of the town, in a row reminiscent of the one in 2005 over plans to knock down Victorian housing in Liverpool and replace it with modern housing stock
He also built a village school, the parish church, the vicarage and the row of terraced cottages in Church Street.
Today, all that remains of the Plume of Feathers is the stableyard, now used as garages, which can be seen from Tythings Court.
A few offices would have telephones - but all would need their fireplaces, as the rows of chimney-pots show.
By 1894 the two smaller lodging houses, inappropriately named Great Terrace (right on above photograph), had been constructed at the southern end of Bedford Row.
This similar view of the village gives a closer impression of the mission house and the row of managers' houses (right).
Their headquarters, ironically, were in the same Middle Row house where the first cholera victims had died.
Two of the responds have a very elementary row of flat leaves. The arcades of the short Norman church were continued east by two standard Decorated bays, but no chancel arch.
In The Square in front of the church there is a row of almshouses founded in 1693 by Thomas Newcombe, printer to Charles II, James II and William III. These were rebuilt in 1818.
In 2003, a new planning row broke out over plans by Richmond College, the local tertiary college (which is actually in Twickenham) to fund expansion plans by selling off part of their site in Crane
in this book show a vanished Medway, with timber rafts towed by barges outside the Archbishop's palace, a once-familiar scene of the river as an industrial highway that is no more.
Until 'mixed bathing' was allowed by the Council around 1906/8, the separate rows of bathing machines for the sexes had to be kept apart by a space of 50 yards.
In 2003, a new planning row broke out over plans by Richmond College, the local tertiary college (which is actually in Twickenham) to fund expansion plans by selling off part of their site in Crane
Today, it is hard to understand why people would choose to work such long hours in often terrible conditions, but with the national population growing, unskilled factory work seemed to offer the
These are now the Century and Wyfold Galleries, but for years they were the premises of Shepherd and Dee, boat builders.
Few of these burgage plots survived the 20th century, but until 1900 on the south side of Paul's Row, the High Street, and Easton Street the burgage plots ran down to the banks of the River Wye
…Cornfields were seen where the Fairdene Estate now rises whilst High Street, Coulsdon [Brighton Road] did not exist.
Another view of the Bowness Ferry shows a full coach-and-four just about to set out from the Bowness side of the lake, with the coachman at the front steadying the nervous horses.This must have been
Places (93)
Photos (711)
Memories (1283)
Books (0)
Maps (566)