Places
Sorry, no places were found that related to your search.
Photos
Sorry, no photos were found that related to your search.
Maps
7,034 maps found.
Books
163 books found. Showing results 8,089 to 8,112.
Memories
22,901 memories found. Showing results 3,371 to 3,380.
Burt Rule Dropped This Shaft
I wish I could upload a photo of young Ivy Rule with her father & grand-dad, at the opening of Dolcoath New Shaft. Wonder if there are any Rules still in the Camborne area.
A memory of Camborne by
Park Road Cheam
I lived at The Gables 22 park road cheam in 1950 to 1955 went to Ambleside school oppisite the red lion pub, the Fair came once a year to our road great fun with the galloping horses and playing All I want is Music
A memory of Cheam by
Lost Friends
Hello,this is really a request for help in finding some long lost friends from Southgate.I now live in Cyprus,but used to live in Hampden Way N14 and lost touch with them in 1979.I knew the people at 169 and 131 and ...Read more
A memory of Southgate in 1979 by
St Johns Schhol And Church
Happy memories of Blackburn attended St Johns School 1930s lived in Garnett Street no longer there I was married at St Johns Church 1952 and lived on Queens Rd till 1975 when we moved to Sale Cheshire. My Father was a ...Read more
A memory of Blackburn in 1946 by
Handforth
My family (Brown) have lived in Handforth till 1995, over 300 years! I (Susan) used to live at 47 Wallingford Road in one of the prefabs, with the air raid shelter in the garden!! I can remember Mr Jones lived opposite. He made me a ...Read more
A memory of Handforth in 1962 by
Childhood Memories
As children we stayed at North Side Head in Middlesmoor .. the farmer was called Tom Whitfield, his wife was Mirriam. We stayed in the cottage next door to the farm. As children we fed orphan lambs and collected eggs and had a wonderful freedom ... Happy days
A memory of Middlesmoor in 1966 by
Prefabs At Goodenough Way, Old Coulsdon.
Does anyone have any pictures, ground or ariel, of the prefabs in Goodenough Way in Old Coulsdon, around 1950/5. I used to live there. Many thanks Lesley nee Boxall.
A memory of Old Coulsdon in 1953
Jaywick!
Our Aunt had a really Art Deco property in Jaywick- curvey windows, flat roof the size of a football pitch(it seemed); huge room with amazing folding dividing doors. And the whole place smelt of Jaywick sand. Not polluted sand, but ...Read more
A memory of Clacton-On-Sea
Living In Kilburn In 60's
We have lived in kilburn most of our lives. Lived in Hilltop Road and Iverson Road in the 60's & 70's. Does anyone remember the Phoenix Youthclub netherwood street. Spent many a great night in there. It ...Read more
A memory of Kilburn by
School Days.
I also went to Stanford junior school, I have fond memories of Stanford. I used to catch the bus from East Tilbury to school every day. I remember the one cow in the field near the railway station. The tuck shop was great, ...Read more
A memory of Stanford-le-Hope in 1948 by
Your search returned a large number of results. Please try to refine your search further.
Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 8,089 to 8,112.
The West Lodge and Gates are at the head of De Parys Avenue.
Beyond the route suggested in this chapter, which finishes at Bedford Park, the 1950s and 1960s expansion of Bedford to the east was well planned with parks, shopping parades and schools - many of the
The Mersey Docks & Harbour Company also had their offices in the building at the time of our photograph.
Dedicated to St Swithun, a Bishop of Winchester from 852 to 862, this imposing structure, dating from the 1790s, stands on the site of an earlier church that had been reduced to ruins by the collapse
This patterned red-brick Victorian building was occupied from 1916 onwards by the Benedictine nuns of the Adorers of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, of Montmartre, OSB and used as a novitiate house, before
The church stands at the entry to Bodmin and was passed by everyone travelling through the county before the town was by- passed by the A30.
Although spinning and weaving were Paisley's main industries, there were also several shipyards along the banks of the River Cart. The longest lived was Fleming & Ferguson.
Some distance away from the village is charming Beck Hole, today a magnet for tourists in search of locations from the TV series Heartbeat.
The pure white marble angel (centre left) is seen by all who pass through the Trough of Bowland.
It was rebuilt in 1752 after the remnant of the Cluniac priory church became unsafe.
An unusual, but often most welcome, combination of pharmacy and sub-post office, the building on the near left has performed the function under at least three owners to the knowledge
Pevsner likened Hamble to a West Country fishing village, and he was right to make the comparison.
Looking like a refugee from Disney World, or something dreamed up by mad King Ludwig of Bavaria, the Shakespeare Memorial Building was erected in 1879.
In the backgound are the ruins of Bolton Castle, which was built by Richard Scrope in the 1380s.
This street, originally called Sepulchre Street, was renamed Gainsborough Street c1910 in honour of the artist. The building was at this time a hotel with tearooms.
This slow growth of population in the 1900s is explained by the fact that Runcorn was very much a cul-de-sac town.
Devil's Den, near Marlborough in Wiltshire, is an example of how the ravages of the plough is nothing more than intentional vandalism.
This attractive group, which makes the most of the possibilities of tile-hanging walls, is on the Petworth Road just south-west of the Green.
From the Market Place our town tour heads south along perhaps the best street in Abingdon for the survival of older buildings: East St Helen Street.
Buckinghamshire's County Lunatic Asylum was built at Stone, three miles west of Aylesbury, in the early 1850s. It was given a more ornate entrance building in the 1860s, including the tower.
The coal wharves at the canal basin by Walton Street were soon joined by factories along the canal.
The village has acquired international fame as the home of the Quorn Hunt; its founder Hugo Meynell took residence in 1753 at Quorn Hall (now an educational centre).
The town is most famous now for its annual international eisteddfod, one of the high spots of the cultural calendar in Wales.
Only about 2 miles from Yeovil's bustle, Brympton D'Evercy is in a completely tranquil setting approached along an avenue of plane trees.
Places (0)
Photos (0)
Memories (22901)
Books (163)
Maps (7034)