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Maps
7,034 maps found.
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163 books found. Showing results 8,281 to 8,304.
Memories
22,901 memories found. Showing results 3,451 to 3,460.
Camp Road
Unless I am mistaken, this shot is pointing due south in which the trees of Lynchford Road can be seen in the distance. The distant building on the left hand corner of the "T" junction at the end of Camp Road was "Boots cash ...Read more
A memory of Farnborough by
Northlands Maternity Home
I was born at Northlands in 1953 and I do believe the home is still there
A memory of Emsworth in 1953 by
The Crescent Tottenham
I lived at number 59 The Crescent for 10 years from when I was born until 1970 when we moved due to the road being demolished for the new estate that is there today. Our family name was Dobson and there was my Mum Joyce, ...Read more
A memory of Tottenham in 1970 by
War Years Borth Y Gest
I am Anne Keating (nee Drake) and was on holiday at the outbreak of war and stayed there for the duration. My Grannie owned Wendon where Marjorie & Olive were evacuated, I remember them both, we were all about the ...Read more
A memory of Borth-y-Gest in 1940 by
Lemington Upon Tyne, Scouting
Scouting Life during the Forties I was born in January 1936 in a large village, Lemington in Northumberland, England. Lemington bordered on the limit of the city of Newcastle upon Tyne. It was a working class ...Read more
A memory of Lemington in 1944 by
Memories When I Was Small.
i lived at 51 wednesfield road oppisite the poplar public house. Ican remember fosters shop i also used to walk up sun street to corn hill were there was a small shop before the wheel public house we bought fish chips ...Read more
A memory of Heath Town in 1960 by
Golden Wedding Anniversary
We were married there on 21 March 1964 and later that year emigrated to Australia. Right now we are planning to visit St Leonards as our 50th anniversary approaches, next year. This is an unfamiliar view to me, I like ...Read more
A memory of Sandridge in 1964 by
Red House Boarding School
I went to red house boarding school from about 71 till about 74 used to fish in the old pond up at burgh Heath never had a bite my name is Gary slater. Mr Hopkins was my guitar teacher. Still play now
A memory of Burgh Heath in 1971
Remembering Three Bridges, As A Boy
I lived in No.29 New Street. I remember playing with Jeff & Billy Kowach, Alfie Manzoli (who lived in the now Barclays Bank), John Denman (also of New Street), Richard Freakes, Graham and Michael ...Read more
A memory of Three Bridges by
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 8,281 to 8,304.
Cycles are clearly the 'in' thing for Barnstaple ladies at the turn of the century.
Each day at dawn, strings of racehorses would pass gracefully up the hill, as they had 100 years earlier.
The Luton factory's great wartime feat was to design and build a completely new tank, which was ready for production within a year of the conflict starting.
Between 1900 and 1905 Vickers built Vickerstown on Walney Island, an estate to house shipyard workers.
It was once thought (justifiably at that time) to be a large burial mound for an important Bronze Age chieftain.
Virtually unchanged since this view was taken, apart from the loss of the central chimney stacks, the Six Bells is in the old village of Horley near the parish church of St Bartholomew, whose churchyard
This is East Bridge, at the eastern end of East Street (far right), looking eastwards from the north bank of the River Asker.
Tantallon Castle perches on top of cliffs overlooking the Firth of Forth. It was once the seat of the powerful Douglas family, wardens of the Border Marches and lords of Galloway.
The parkland of 18th-century Welton Place sweeps south to the north bank of the Grand Union Canal, in its cutting leading to the east portal of the Braunston Tunnel.
A sign of the times is here in the form of the AA box (right) with two AA patrol men going across the road for a quick one!
Here we see two horse-drawn narrow boats, the 'Linnet' and the 'Evelyn', belonging to George Garside, at the attractively sited lock in Cassiobury Park, Watford.
This is how a guide to seaside resorts of 1895 described Rhyl: 'Not many years ago there was no town here at all, but merely a few fishermen's huts upon the shore.
Arthur Trevorrow is throwing a jug on the wheel; beside him are various examples of his work, beautifully hand-decorated with slip in waves, whorls and dots.
This is how a guide to seaside resorts of 1895 described Rhyl: 'Not many years ago there was no town here at all, but merely a few fishermen's huts upon the shore.
This, the northern gate, stands on the site of the Roman Porta Principalis, the gateway of Eboracum. The barbican was demolished in 1835. The name Bootham derives from Buthum, 'at the booths'.
The village is only two miles from Richmond, but it retains its rural charm. The White Swan Inn on the left is 300 years old; the third house from the right is the old Gilling Club for working men.
If the railway viaduct carrying the LNER from Teeside to Scarborough is a memorial to its bricklayers, then how much more should the two piers at the harbour mouth be a tribute to those men of stone
The whole of Charlwood parish, formerly in Surrey, was annexed to Sussex for some years prior to 1974, and the southern part of the parish remains in Sussex.
As we look toward West Pier from the west, we see the landward pavilion at the right, then the tower of the Metropole to its left. Nearer the camera are a range of somewhat disparate stucco fronts.
The ancient harbour of Tenterden, this was once a shipbuilding centre and was visited by Henry VIII in 1538.
Nearly four hundred feet above sea level, this principal inland resort of Kent owes its popularity to the accidental discovery of a chalybeate spring by Dudley, Lord North in 1606, which led to the fashion
The coming of firstly the Grand Union Canal and then the railways, led to the establishment of modern Linslade at its present location.
The large very attractive Saxon village on the road from Oakham to Stamford now overlooks the modern dam on the north-east angle of Rutland Water formed in the valley of the River Gwash,
This is a beautiful photograph of Rutland at its best. Pollarded willows line the stream, which appears to have trapped the wheels from a large cart.
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