Places
14 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Coates, Lancashire
- Coate, Wiltshire (near Swindon)
- Coates, Lincolnshire
- Coat, Somerset
- Coates, Gloucestershire
- Coates, Nottinghamshire
- Coates, Cambridgeshire
- Coates, Sussex
- Coates, Lothian (near Penicuik)
- Coate, Wiltshire (near Devizes)
- Great Coates, Humberside
- Salt Coates, Cumbria
- Little Coates, Humberside
- North Coates Airfield, Lincolnshire
Photos
49 photos found. Showing results 1,121 to 49.
Maps
88 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 1,345 to 1.
Memories
1,483 memories found. Showing results 561 to 570.
Days At School
I also remember going on the boat across to Taynuilt. I have very happy memories of my childhood days in Bonawe. If you knew my Grandmother Mckinnon and her daughter went on to marry Tommy Shaw they lived in the Guilt which has ...Read more
A memory of Taynuilt in 1947 by
Cruising 1965
Wonderful to take a cruise on these boats on a warm summer day.
A memory of Windsor by
River Gardens `960
Used to be a peaceful place to pass a few hours in contemplation and just watch the boats.
A memory of Windsor by
'swallows & Amazons' (Or Our Childhood On The Weaver!)
My parents also had a boat down at AB called 'Jan' which was moored outside the cottage. The cottage was lived in when my parents bought the boat, but then the husband (Mr Noden I think) died ...Read more
A memory of Acton Bridge in 1961 by
Childhood Memories
I lived at Bridge cottage from 1955 to 1964. Just across the road from the Blacksmiths Arms with the Plough Inn at our rear, and the Nags Head in the middle of the village there was no shortage of pubs for the adults. Two ...Read more
A memory of Two Dales in 1960 by
Born And Lived In Thorne Moorends And Relatives There.
Hi, my family were living at the Grove, Moorends when I was born in 1949. It was not long after the war and mum worked in the fields and dad at Thorne Colliery. My grandad's sister lived at ...Read more
A memory of Moorends in 1949 by
Nursing Training At 'jimmy's'
My mother, Doreen Hall (Nee Bilton), related these memories to me: I started nursing at St James’ Hospital, Leeds (Jimmy's) in 1948. I was 17 years old, the only one straight from school. I didn’t need any ...Read more
A memory of Leeds in 1948 by
Holidays In Bridlington In 1950''s
When I was a child my parents use to take my sister and I to Bridlington on the train from Hull for 2 weeks holiday a year. It was magic land to us. My dad was born and brought up in Flamborough but moved to ...Read more
A memory of Bridlington in 1953 by
Memories Of Flamborough
My dad was born in 1909 in Flamborough. This photo is significant to me because, as a young man, my dad helped to install the winding equipment in the old winding shed on the left hand side of this picture. This photo ...Read more
A memory of Flamborough by
Working On The River
doe,s anybody remember the tug boat the conrquer paddle steam tug I worked on it for a short time. we used to bring the big coal ships from the mouthe of the tyne. I think I have spelled the name wrong but somebody out there will remember or have a photo cheers tara
A memory of Newcastle upon Tyne in 1953 by
Captions
1,648 captions found. Showing results 1,345 to 1,368.
Much of the villagers' living comes from the tourist trade, a far cry from the century before, when the men risked their lives going out to sea in their small boats and women spent their time looking after
This attractive boat house is set at the foot of a steep cliff alongside the River Taf with its 'heron-priested' shore.
This style of fishing - taking a net out by boat into a semi-cirlce and then hauling it in from the shore - is almost obsolete today.
The lake, originally the reservoir for the cotton mill at the far end, was used for boating and swimming, whilst sunbathers and picnickers enjoyed its wooded banks.
The picturesque cottages and boating activity here have long made this part of Sussex an obvious subject for artists and photographers.
Visitors staying in these cottages would enjoy a quiet holiday walking the marshy banks of the estuary and the surrounding heathlands, or boating and fishing.
A mixture of near-derelict and beached craft gives this working slipway an untidy appearance that will certainly have been at odds with the fact that the majority of the boats represented someone's
The enormous piles of white stone are actually piles of china clay from Cornwall awaiting trans-shipment onto narrow boats so they can be taken to the china factories in Stoke-on-Trent.
Today, walkers and fishermen can be seen at intervals along the canal, as well as colourful boating activity.
A line of rowing boats is moored in the bay waiting for the tide to turn.
They are all intent on what is happening on the water as yachts and clockwork boats bob their way around the pool.
The boatyard serves the marina, which has space for 100 boats.
This is a popular area for boating, and here we see two of the inns much used by those who have enjoyed a day afloat - the Old Ship to the left, and the Jolly Sailor facing the camera.
Fully decked, and ranging in length from about 45ft to 55ft and from 14 to 25 tons, these boats were employed chasing mackerel.
Outside the entrance, a strict- looking customs official is keeping his eagle eye on the photographer as well as on the fishing boats, which were often used for smuggling tobacco, wines and
Just as they do today, the boys who lived in this historic town - Fordwich is the smallest town in Britain - enjoyed boating on the River Stour which ebbed and flowed between Canterbury and the sea.
Using a flat-bottomed rowing boat, he would ferry the Hambleton villagers over the Wyre for one penny.
Three people aboard the punt steady their craft as a passenger boat heads upstream.
This sylvan setting was as equally appealing as the beach for young and old alike, and the waters of the Bourne, tamed and enclosed, were an ideal place for children to sail their boats.
Exmouth never had a pier in the traditional English seaside sense, just a landing stage to facilitate access to the larger passenger boats that visited the resort.
In earlier days The Strand was a threatening neighbourhood, and many travellers preferred to take a boat rather than pick their way along the ill-paved street and be jostled by pickpockets.
A pleasure boat prepares to leave the jetty steps, on the right- hand side of the photograph.
The name of the small boat, 'Emily', and that of her owner, one T Ley of Porlock Weir, can be readily identified from the stern sheets.
The Pilot's Pier light sits on a long promontory extending from the sea wall, and cargo shipping and the associated tug boats pass by it on their way in and out of the port.
Places (14)
Photos (49)
Memories (1483)
Books (1)
Maps (88)