Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chester, Cheshire
- Congleton, Cheshire
- Runcorn, Cheshire
- Warrington, Cheshire
- Crewe, Cheshire
- Northwich, Cheshire
- Chester Zoo, Cheshire
- Widnes, Cheshire
- Macclesfield, Cheshire
- Lymm, Cheshire
- Nantwich, Cheshire
- Frodsham, Cheshire
- Knutsford, Cheshire
- Winsford, Cheshire
- Alderley Edge, Cheshire
- Wilmslow, Cheshire
- Ellesmere Port, Cheshire
- Sandbach, Cheshire
- Alsager, Cheshire
- Bollington, Cheshire
- Malpas, Cheshire
- Neston, Cheshire
- Middlewich, Cheshire
- Gawsworth, Cheshire
- Cuddington, Cheshire
- Burton, Cheshire (near Tarvin)
- Prestbury, Cheshire
- Beeston, Cheshire
- Weaverham, Cheshire
- Parkgate, Cheshire (near Neston)
- Goostrey, Cheshire
- Hartford, Cheshire
- Disley, Cheshire
- Tarporley, Cheshire
- Barnton, Cheshire
- Sandiway, Cheshire
Photos
4,415 photos found. Showing results 61 to 80.
Maps
2,963 maps found.
Books
16 books found. Showing results 73 to 16.
Memories
156 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.
The 70's At The Lake
My memories are of living at 37 pickmere lane from 1969 age 7. My mum Beryl Owen still lives there now and I still live in Wincham. I will always remember the "bob bob bob" of the motor boats which I could here from my bedroom ...Read more
A memory of Pickmere by
51 Old Elvet
My Grandparents ran a boarding house at 51 Old Elvet opposite the Shire Hall I was born in 1943 my Father actually went to Durham school where he represented the school in Both Football and Rugby I have tremendous memories of Durham City ...Read more
A memory of Durham by
My Great Great Grandmother
On the maternal side of my ancestry, I knew my maternal grandfather for many years. There was a large leather bound family album which as a child, I was permitted to look at. It was after the "all clear" sounded in the ...Read more
A memory of Shrewsbury
Wroughton From 1954ish
My parents moved from East London to Swindon and then to Wroughton in 1954. My parents were Pat and Geoff Leach. I am Janet (Leach - now Ford) and my sister penny was born in the maternity hospital in Swindon in 1958. My ...Read more
A memory of Wroughton
Summers At The Warren
My mum and dad and I spent many summers at the Talacre Warren. My father was a Co-op branch manager in Woodley, Cheshire and knew a couple, Mr & Mrs Taylor who had a wooden chalet on the Warren. In addition to the Chalet ...Read more
A memory of Talacre by
Little Sutton Shops Chester Road
Hi ,can anyone cast their minds back to the shopping area in Little Sutton where there is a very tiny car park on the A41, the shops that are there now are Cheshire Building Society, chemist (Westminster ...Read more
A memory of Little Sutton by
Happy Days
If anyone has memories of living in Marbury in the late '50s and '60s I would be very interested to hear from you. My name was Campbell before I was married. Thank you. The Marbury I refer to is near Northwich in Cheshire, not Shropshire.
A memory of Marbury
Goodrington
I was born in 1948 in Wallasy Cheshire, now Merseyside. As my maternal grandparents lived in Plympton, we used to spend two or three weeks with them every year. A day out to Goodrington was very popular, travelling by train from ...Read more
A memory of Paignton 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
Keepers Lane Weaverham Cheshire
I was not born and have never lived in Weaverham but I, as my parents put it after 1953, went there to play. They finally forbade me ever to see Anita Smith of Keepers Lane with some very violent threats that have always ...Read more
A memory of Weaverham by
Captions
94 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.
OF ALL the villages in this collection, Nether Alderley perhaps gives us the best impression of what a north-eastern Cheshire village was like before the Industrial Revolution changed both the
Standing beyond the market area of High Town, near to the Shire Hall, St Peter's is the civic church of Hereford.
Beyond the cars and omnibuses are the clock on the Shire Hall and the frontage of the Corn Exchange.
Built of red brick, the Shire Hall was designed by local architects H Barnes and F E Coates, and was completed in 1898.
Whether it is something to love or to hate, the hunt with all its colourful trappings has brought much-needed employment to the Shires since the 18th century.
The Shire Hall was rebuilt in 1907 in an Edwardian classical style, which included the arms of West Suffolk over the doorway.
It seems to be a busy day at the Shire Hall - home to the county's court-hearings - judging by the number of people gathered outside.
The Shire Hall was built in 1789-91 by John Johnson, the County Surveyor.
Ormesby was once an important market town whose inhabitants were privileged to be exempt from county service, and from contributing funds towards the maintenance of the Shire Knights.
Here is the hunter, bred to cross in safety the open pastures of the Shires, formed in the enclosures' favourite hedge-planting material, which makes up the obstacles to its safe progress.
Standing beyond the market area of High Town, near to the Shire Hall, St Peter's is the civic church of Hereford.
Carved from a 17-ton block of white marble from Carrara in Tuscany, Queen Victoria looks unamused as she grasps her orb and sceptre in front of the Shire Hall.
Along here were the Shire Hall, the Victoria Institute, the Hop Market, St Nicholas Church, Foregate Station, hotels, shops, and the main post office.
Like the estate on which it stands, the pub was named after the Shire Lodge, which still stands on Rockingham Road.
As other banks opened it became known as the Old Bank, the name seen here on the building to the left of the Shire Hall.
The Shire Hall was built in 1789-91 by John Johnson, the County Surveyor.
St Paul's Square became very much the civic centre of the town with the Floral Hall, the Corn Exchange, the Town Hall, the Shire Hall and County Offices looking out onto the church in its central
The Shire Hall was built in 1724; the statue below the clock face is of Henry V, placed there in 1792.
A view from the Shire Hall along what was to become a heavily congested street, until the building of the new relief road, with a string of Georgian and early Victorian shopfronts overshadowed by the
Opposite are the Shire Hall on the right and council offices on the left - until 1880 there were wharves on the site.
The elegant, classical façade of the Shire Hall has dominated the Market Square since it was built in 1798, replacing an earlier Elizabethan hall.
Essex County Council had been formed in 1888, the same year as Chelmsford Borough Council, and had initially held their meetings in the Shire Hall.
Places (748)
Photos (4415)
Memories (156)
Books (16)
Maps (2963)