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3 photos found. Showing results 61 to 3.
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Memories
88 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.
Chelmsford, High Street 1955.
This photo shows the view from the bottom end of the High Street leading up to the Shire Hall in the very far distance. One can clearly see the blinds on the shop on the corner of Springfield Road, and the Boots ...Read more
A memory of Chelmsford by
Matchbox And Dinky Toys
I grew up at Barforth Hall and left when I was 18. I used to spend my pocket money on toy cars with Mrs Brown in this dark and evocative shop, the memory has never left me. I would also go to buy my parents' Christmas ...Read more
A memory of Gainford in 1964 by
School Uniform And Schooldays
This was 1958 the time when I seriously got into drainpipes, drapes and rock 'n roll music. I was at Walbottle Secondary Modern School. I used to take in the leg width of my jeans by hand using a needle and thread to ...Read more
A memory of Newburn in 1958 by
Noneley 2010
My name is Stephen Geary and my partner, Jodie Flynn, an Australian, and I live at Noneley Hall with our 4 four children, Charles (16), Abigail (14), Teddy (22m) and Madeleine (4m). The house was the farmhouse for Noneley Hall Farm, ...Read more
A memory of Noneley in 2010 by
Growing Up In Marbury
I was born in Marbury in 1954. My name is Christine Campbell and I was one of 6 children born to Paul and Kathleen Campbell. My dad worked for ICI. We were allowed to swim in the local open air swimming pool for free. The ...Read more
A memory of Marbury in 1954 by
Hubert Terrace
I often wondered who Hubert was. Other road names around were obvious. Bank Street was on a bank; School street had a school at the end of it. But Hubert Terrace? One side of my street was brick and the other was stone; something ...Read more
A memory of Bensham in 1964 by
Born On The Graig
"It's only wind or powder on the stomach"my Mam had said as she walked home from the ammunition factory on a cold Autumn evening. The "wind" or "powder" was born on the 2nd December 1942. I, Colin Gronow, ...Read more
A memory of Graig in 1940 by
Magna Carta Island
I have several photographs of the house on Magna Carta Island taken during the 1910s and early 1920s. The house was owned by my grandfather during this period, John Francis Mc Gregor (a stockbroker) who was married to my ...Read more
A memory of Runnymede in 1920 by
Early Days In Filton
Although originally from Manchester my parents were living in Filton when I was born in Cheltenham in December 1941. My father, like the majority of men in that area worked at what was then the BAC. He worked at the Rodney Works ...Read more
A memory of Filton in 1940 by
Joppa House
I was there at the time Theresa writes about, and my 4 children were too. I remember you and your brother playing in the hall, and nearly getting killed when you knocked the grandfather clock down. Your mom and I would walk to the ...Read more
A memory of Innellan in 1963 by
Captions
88 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.
Here, right, is Horbury's Carnegie Free Library, built in 1905 and opened on 14 February 1906.
Here we see the bridge over the River Greta in the busy little market town of Keswick in the northern Lakes.
Here the photographer looks west towards East Street between rows of bay-windowed and gabled 1880s Victorian lower-middle- class terraces.
North of the old town, isolated farmhouses and cottages were engulfed in Victorian expansion.
Until 1928, when it was burnt down, the Hall stood at the east end of the village.
Here we see several more of the local ironstone cottages with their well kept and productive gardens.
This is the heart of the town, and markets have been held here for 800 years; the basic size and shape of the market place has remained largely the same throughout that period, as evinced by
This is the heart of the town, and markets have been held here for 800 years; the basic size and shape of the market place has remained largely the same throughout that period, as evinced by
This Victorian edifice has been the venue for all manner of entertainment for all kinds of people over the decades, particularly as a repertory theatre.
Hartley sits on high ground, six miles from Dartford, and enjoys expansive prospects all around.
The largest house in Ewell, opposite the old churchyard, this castellated building was built by Henry Kitchen between 1810 and 1814 to replace an earlier castle which stood here in the reign of King Charles
Here we see the main street.
Here we see a photograph of children enjoying a day at Bungerley Bridge, north of Clitheroe.
Once the price of lead fell after the discovery of cheaper lead from Spain, the population of Reeth halved.
The village hall, left, is no longer here, and has been replaced by a nursing home.
The Town Hall was originally known as the Peel Institution, and was used as Assembly Rooms.
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