Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Barnard Castle, Durham
- Bishop's Castle, Shropshire
- Castle Douglas, Dumfries and Galloway
- Castle Combe, Wiltshire
- Castle Cary, Somerset
- Corfe Castle, Dorset
- Castle Bolton, Yorkshire
- Burgh Castle, Norfolk (near Great Yarmouth)
- Belvoir Castle, Leicestershire
- Castle Hedingham, Essex
- Rowlands Castle, Hampshire
- Castle Acre, Norfolk
- Balmoral Castle, Grampian
- Castle Rising, Norfolk
- Castle Ashby, Northamptonshire
- Castle Bromwich, West Midlands
- Castle Eden, Durham
- Redmire, Yorkshire (near Castle Bolton)
- Castle Donington, Leicestershire
- Gwrych Castle, Clwyd
- Urquhart Castle, Highlands
- Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire
- Cholmondeley Castle, Cheshire
- Wardour Castle, Wiltshire
- Dunstaffnage Castle, Strathclyde
- Raby Castle, Durham
- Crichton Castle, Lothian
- Lumley Castle, Durham
- Dunnottar Castle, Grampian
- Elcho Castle, Tayside
- Elmley Castle, Hereford & Worcester
- Barcaldine Castle, Strathclyde
- Midmar Castle, Grampian
- Hanley Castle, Hereford & Worcester
- Castle Bytham, Lincolnshire
- Kincardine Castle, Grampian
Photos
10,187 photos found. Showing results 1,121 to 1,140.
Maps
432 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 1,345 to 4.
Memories
826 memories found. Showing results 561 to 570.
The Castle School 1943 To 1950
I have read with interest the comment from ex inmates of the Castle School, Stanhope. I was there from 1943 until 1950. As with some of the others I was first placed in similar establishments ; Rochdale – where the ...Read more
A memory of Stanhope in 1943 by
Alehouse Wells School
My school was across the road from where we lived in 131 Kembhill Park, Aberdeen. We came from Liverpool as my dad was working on the oil rigs. We were friends with Judy, Robert, Gordon, Robert and Una Grassick. There was a ...Read more
A memory of Kemnay in 1976 by
The Good Days
My Mother owned the Kings Head and i worked in the reastaurant with her she done all home baking and had Eton College lads and there familys eating there,also a great trade was the Army lads from both barracks,I married one in 1956,we ...Read more
A memory of Windsor in 1948 by
First Day At School
The only school in Haverhill was The Cangle. The new secondary modern, now known as Castle Manor, had not yet been finished. We arrived at school very bewildered being the first of the Londoners and feeling like aliens. I made ...Read more
A memory of Haverhill in 1959 by
Castle Street 'picture House'
The white building on the right used to be the cinema, or as we knew it the 'Picture House'. My late grandfather George Alfred Williams, known as 'Alf' or 'Little Alf' was the projectionist there for many years - he ...Read more
A memory of Caergwrle by
Holiday Home
We had the use of a 3 bed detached home down here for 10 years, it was right at the top of the hill and we could see for miles in all directions. We would come down with suitcases and chill, our youngest was 1 and eldest 13, we had ...Read more
A memory of Kingsbridge in 1987 by
The Horse Shoe Bite
The small sandy beach at Newhaven was known as the horse shoe bite. It was completely covered at high tide, but as the water receded, it exposed fine golden sand, ideal for making castles and getting in your sandwiches. A row ...Read more
A memory of Newhaven in 1960 by
Arrival In Durham
This the view one saw when arriving in Durham by train from Kings Cross, but nowadays most of the little houses between the station and the city have vanished. The heart of the city lies in a horseshoe-shaped bend in the River ...Read more
A memory of Durham in 1956 by
My First Visit To Dundonald
My mom, Nancy McGeachie (married to Ken Collins in British Columbia, Canada), was born in the building on the corner Main Street and Richmond Terrace in 1926 and then lived in #5 Kilmarnock Road. I had heard so much ...Read more
A memory of Dundonald in 2003 by
Colchester Open Air Swimming Pool
I remember the swimming pool. My mum used to take us all day in the school holidays. My friend Adele and I used to go there in the evening in September. My dad used to drop us off. We were the only ones in ...Read more
A memory of Colchester in 1970 by
Captions
1,894 captions found. Showing results 1,345 to 1,368.
The only action the castle ever saw was in 1216, when it was occupied by the French at the invitation of the barons rebelling against King John. COMPTON, Loseley
Just up river from the bridge and the castle, this would appear to be a view from Wintour`s Leap of the beginning of the great Horseshoe Bend which encompasses the peninsula of Lancaut.
With its Roman remains and castle, Colchester has much to support its claim to be Britain's oldest recorded town.
Totternhow Knolls is the name given to the remains of Totternhoe Castle, a Norman motte and bailey built over Saxon remains.
Here we see the castle after its restoration by the Marquis of Bute. The main residential block, including the great hall, was sited along the south side of the inner curtain wall.
This great citadel was erected by Edward I of England between 1285 and 1322 as one of a chain of castles by which he kept a secure footing in Wales.
Halfway along the castle, Henry II's shell keep on the Norman Motte or mound divides the two baileys, the right-hand one filled with the massive Victorian rebuild.
The castle is set on a knoll overlooking the River Don.
The imposing Chapel Royal at Dublin Castle. It was completed in 1814 by Francis Johnson, and is situated in the Lower Yard, on the site of an earlier, smaller, chapel.
Sir Robert Lumley was granted licences to crenellate in 1389 and 1392, making Lumley, along with Raby, County Durham's two late 14th-century castles.
Overlooking the Clyde to the north of the present town of Bothwell, the castle is still an impressive sight despite being a ruin.
A large number of country houses, many of which were called castles by their owners, have either been demolished or are shadows of their former selves.
This view is from beside the Ice House, its balcony covered in creeper, looking back down Castle Hill.
Centre left is Castle Walk.
In the 1920s it became the Beacon Castle Hotel. It eventually burnt down in a spectacular blaze on 16 May 1985 which took 11 fire crews to extinguish.
He was known as the Kingmaker and lived in Eridge Castle, the ancestral seat of the Marquis of Abergavenny.The lands of Eridge have been in the hands of the Nevill family in a direct male line from
The old smoke house (foreground) was built in 1848 in a romantic style to resemble an ancient castle, complete with mock stone cannons which aided the drainage from the private garden above.
Looking beyond Castle Hill, we see the cliffs around Beer in the distance. This open plain of sea front has since been divided by the sea wall and a modern motor road.
Built in 1592 for Ferdinand, 5th Earl of Derby, to enable him to watch horse-racing on the sands at Meols, Leasowe Castle was converted into a hotel in 1982.
Nearby is Scotney Castle, owned at this time by one of the Hussey family, historic ironmasters of Kent.
In 1965 a brand new one of these, complete with walnut fascia, cost £592-8s-9d at Sparshatts, Castle Way, Southampton.
Begun by William Lord Hastings in 1480, and never finished, Kirby Muxloe is an early example of the use of brick in castle building.
great space was created by Bishop Flambard at the beginning of the 12th century: he decided to demolish the clutter of wooden houses and the market place because of the potential fire hazard to the castle
We are looking from just inside Birmingham Road up Castle Hill, with Tipton Road off to the right. On the extreme left is the Station Garage, then an Austin dealership.
Places (141)
Photos (10187)
Memories (826)
Books (4)
Maps (432)