Places
25 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Barnes, Greater London
- Barns Green, Sussex
- Walker Barn, Cheshire
- Alton Barnes, Wiltshire
- Kirkton Barns, Fife
- Barns, Borders (near Peebles)
- Lowes Barn, Durham
- Broom's Barn, Suffolk
- Fenton Barns, Lothian
- Red Barn, Cambridgeshire
- High Barn, Lincolnshire
- Lauder Barns, Borders
- Barne Barton, Devon
- Barnes Hall, Yorkshire
- Barnes Street, Kent
- West Barns, Lothian
- Park Barn, Surrey
- Black Barn, Lincolnshire
- Barnes Cray, Greater London
- Hale Barns, Greater Manchester
- New Barn, Kent (near Northfleet)
- West Barnes, Greater London
- Tithe Barn Hillock, Merseyside
- Catherine-de-Barnes, West Midlands
- Besses o' th' Barn, Greater Manchester
Photos
293 photos found. Showing results 61 to 80.
Maps
175 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
492 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.
Fond Holiday Memories
In the summer of 1963 my Dad took my sister (11), brother (4) and me (6) to stay with my Auntie Marie. She lived in the house adjoining the pub. I think it had a name like Penryn and appeared on the front cover of Country ...Read more
A memory of High Easter in 1963 by
Family Of Ewj Moloney, Lancing Solicitor D 1978
I was part of the St James the Less Players, the Parish church drama group, which started my career on the boards. The Downs,The Manor, The Park, The Clump, The Chalkpit..The Woods The Beach..were ...Read more
A memory of Lancing by
Nick Bowyer
I joined the BARN THEATRE SOCIETY in 1970 and we put on several performances of Gilbert and Sullivan operettas in the new (1972) building opposite the Campus
A memory of Welwyn Garden City by
Grand Living At Moresdale Hall, Lambrigg
We came to a deserted Moresdale Hall in the 1980s and spent several years refurbishing it. Because it had 2 front doors and 2 staircases we were able to divide it and share it with my brother's family. ...Read more
A memory of Moresdale Hall
The Mayfair Carriage Company
For the last 35 years I have owned by uncle Frank's 1956 Morris Cowley ( reg 330 HHX). For many years I drove it as my preferred vehicle and then, sadly, it sat in a barn until 2 years ago when I began it's ...Read more
A memory of Colindale by
Living In Chilton
My family moved to Chilton Foliat and took over the "Old Post Office". I was still young then and went to the old school run by Mr & Mrs Hassall who lived next door to the school. Two classrooms and very fond memories. ...Read more
A memory of Chilton Foliat in 1964 by
Looking Back To The Early Days
I was born in rented 'rooms' at Wordsworth Road in 1936 and came to move with my parents to five different addresses at Easington before I moved away from the area, when I married in 1963. But although my ...Read more
A memory of Easington Colliery in 1900 by
A Glance Backwards
I came to live in Stadhampton in 1954 from Henley on Thames. My father was the village Policeman. I found that even for 1954 life in Stadhampton was comparatively primitive compared with what I was used to! But it was a ...Read more
A memory of Stadhampton in 1954 by
Harworth 'old' Village
The large Horse Chestnut tree to the right was very popular when conkers were in season with boys searching the ground and throwing whatever came to hand at the tree to try and dislodge the nuts that were temptingly out of ...Read more
A memory of Harworth in 1964 by
A Boscastle Family
Relating to the two little girls standing in the street, the one on the right is Nellie Davy, my aunt. She was the eldest child of Harry and Mary Ann Davy (nee Ferrett). Nellie and three other siblings were born at Butts but ...Read more
A memory of Boscastle in 1900 by
Captions
248 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.
The morning-coated and top-hatted scholars stroll past Barnes Pool, rebuilt in 1930 in Neo-Georgian style.
Vernacular fencing surrounds the paddock of the smallholding, which has a small weather-boarded barn with a thatched roof. There are more houses among the trees on the hillside.
The old brick barn still stands, but these lovely cottages have been replaced by two red-brick modern houses.
During the Second World War the scientist Barnes Wallis experimented with his famous bouncing bomb along this stretch of the Channel.
It was erected in the 19th century by Thomas Barnes. He had previously made his fortune as a cotton mill owner and by investing in the railways.
The chapel was not considered an architec- tural success, and its interior has been described as 'barn-like'.
started out as a nonconformist, in his case, a Unitarian, and at Styal village is the Unitarian chapel he built, besides the Methodist chapel which he allowed his workers to convert from an old barn
Cressing is known today for its medieval barns at nearby Cressing Temple.
Outside the barn a photographer waits for customers, as few people then had a camera of their own with which to record the family's day out.
Looking down Barn Street towards the spire of St Martin's Church, the Bethesda Baptist Chapel can be seen on the right.
Behind the church is an attached farm and tithe barn.
Barns (foreground and left) show that this is still a farming community, but new houses have since occupied the field in the foreground.
Behind the barn is the red-brick rectory where the great 17th- century scholar Meric Casaubon lived and died. He is buried in Canterbury Cathedral.
However, the property on the left and the barn projecting towards the road remain unchanged.
The 1710 tithe barn became a restaurant with a display of old farm utensils, similar to 'th'owd tithe barn' at Garstang.
Histon is where Mr Chivers started making jam in a barn in 1873.
Only a few ruins and the tithe barn remain.
The hay would later be stacked before being taken to a hay barn store for the winter feed for the livestock. Holy Trinity, the parish church, dominates the skyline.
We meet Bazalgette later at the Embankment in central London; seen here from the Barnes bank towpath, his suspension bridge has a 420-foot main span, and the towers are finished with French-style pavilion
By 1834, when it was known as Kings Barn Farm, it had been divided into three dwellings.
Following the closure of the post office and stores in March 2003, a community shop and post office opened in the barn of the Swan in December 2003.The single-decker bus is approaching another now
Although described in this 1950s photograph as 'The Mill', this sturdy 18th-century cottage at picturesque Ashford in the Water, near Bakewell, looks more like a farmhouse, with its barn and stables on
Between the village hall and the large windowless barn on the left, the picturesque group of houses has now been converted to Lion House.
The village square appears to be sited on the L-shaped outer court of the Abbey, where the barns, storehouses and workshops would once have stood.
Places (25)
Photos (293)
Memories (492)
Books (0)
Maps (175)