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Memories
540 memories found. Showing results 321 to 330.
Fishing On The Thames At Romney Island
As a teenager living in the Old Kent Road back in the early 1960s, Windsor was surprisingly accessible to me. I spent most summer Saturdays fishing the lock cut at Romney Island. A number 53 bus would take me ...Read more
A memory of Windsor by
A Day Out With My Granddaughter At Arlington Court
Easter Sunday 2009 was a gloriously fine and sunny day - just right for a family outing so my son David drove us all in my car to Arlington Court which is an enormous National Trust property not ...Read more
A memory of Arlington in 2009 by
The Coronation Of Queen Elizabeth Ii
I was about 3 years old when the present Queen was crowned. Us children went up to the manor house where they held a party outside. I remember someone with a cine camera filming the event. I have ...Read more
A memory of Wootton Fitzpaine in 1953 by
Happy Times
I lived in Crawcrook until I was 13 years old, then we moved to Coventry, that was about 1955/56. My dad was a miner and had to leave because of the pit closing. I remember happy times playing out down the channels and paddling in ...Read more
A memory of Crawcrook by
School Days
I was at Bembridge School above Whitecliff Bay from 1953 to 1958. I used to spend many happy hours in the bay and on the top of Culver Down.
A memory of Whitecliff Bay in 1953 by
Historic St Peter's Hospital
St Peter's Hospital was one of Bristol's finest and most historic buildings, which had been home to pirates and an alchemist as well as a mint and a workhouse among many other uses. It was destroyed in the blitz ...Read more
A memory of Bristol by
229a Worcester Road/20(?) Merton Road
This picture stirs memories, I stayed in two of the flats above the shops in the 70/80's, & also lived in a house in Merton Road, which is just around the corner from the library - now a betting ...Read more
A memory of Malvern Link by
Medieval Banquets At The Bay Tree
In the early seventies, I was a student at Sarum St Michael College of Education in the Cathedral Close. The weekends were incredibly boring, with nothing to do and nowhere to have fun. Until, a friend asked me if ...Read more
A memory of Salisbury by
Memories Of A Convalescent Home
I am interested about a children's convalescent home called, 'Birds Nest and Grange House, 41 Brunswick Square, Herne Bay, Kent. In about 1958/59 as an 8 or 9 year old, my 10 year old sister, ...Read more
A memory of Herne Bay by
Wedding Day
We moved to Eastry when I was 2...now 60 years ago ....We lived in the house on the Premiere Garage High Street which was over the road from the newsagents called Bickers. As kids we played in the wood of Boystown behind the garage. ...Read more
A memory of Eastry by
Captions
870 captions found. Showing results 769 to 792.
The hotel stands on the north bank of the River Leven, by the bridge.
This scene has altered little since the picture was captured.
Formerly Garbrand Hall, this two-storied, five-bayed stuccoed house stands at the centre of the village, and was built on a Tudor site around 1775.
Long before John Bunyan was born in the village, the son of a brazier or tinker, Elstow was known for its Benedictine nunnery founded in about 1075.
Symondsbury is an intimate little village positioned between two rounded hills, and probably on the route of a medieval road linking Bridport and Axminster.
The stone-fronted houses match the shops with their sturdiness and `built to last` qualities.
The creators of Golden Acre Holiday Bungalows - as they are now called - proposed a relatively modest development of 18 such buildings.
This seaside resort and residential haven developed from the 1860s. Despite being continuous with Colwyn Bay, it preserves its own peaceful character.
The collection of moored open boats lying inside the jetty, and a few other small craft, make a strong contrast with the crowded waters inside an obviously busy harbour in the previous
Further east, the photographer looks west towards the pier along what was then known as Gloucester Parade, now The Esplanade.
The name of this historic village derives from the flatfish called 'flukes', caught off the shore in Morecombe Bay. There is a poster for cocoa in the window of the Co-op shop on the left.
The work of building the cathedral can be attributed to several distinct periods.
The Steine, originally marshy ground, became the focus of early Brighton development as houses were built for the fashionable visitors.
Farley Green is situated towards the south end of Albury parish, and its fields are carved out of the surrounding greensand woods.
The body of the church is flint with Victorian detail, including a bleak Victorian window of 1847 on the south transept front.
The interior is much earlier than the exterior. The aisles have Perpendicular windows, but some extensive restoration has spoilt its earlier magnificence.
A steep road from Sabden leads to the well-known pass of Nick o' Pendle.
We are now further west in The Narrow, as this part of High Street was called. Woolworths, on the site of the Lion Inn, can just be seen beyond the third shop blind.
This is a detail of the chalet zone which sprang up behind the 1897-built Esplanade (right), between the waterworks and the Salt House on Pitfield Marsh (left).
Here we see landslipped Langmoor Gardens (left) before the building of retaining walls and amusement arcades.
Reculver is a popular little seaside town on the coast between the Thanet resorts and Herne Bay. There was once a Roman Saxon Shore Fort here.
Across the inner basin from the quay (right) beside the Cobb Warehouses is the 17th-century North Wall (centre), which protects the harbour from easterly gales.
The central bay was destroyed at some time and has been rebuilt. The nearer range has been dendrodated to 1447-48, and the further to 1533-34.
Brighton made the seaside fashionable for the upper crust, and its wider popularity was settled when the railway made the connection in 1841.
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