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Maps
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Memories
2,048 memories found. Showing results 51 to 60.
When Victor Value Came To Town
One sunny day in the late 1950's the next door neighbour came knocking at our door with some exciting news. A big new food store had opened on the Broadway, Bexleyheath,. It's a Supermarket, she said. It's Victor ...Read more
A memory of Bexleyheath by
Memories Of West Hendon
I was born in 1946. I lived in Stuart Avenue opposite the large floral clock of Edmunds Walker co. The clock was adorned with flowers all through the year. There was a field at the end of our road adjacent to the Edgeware ...Read more
A memory of West Hendon by
St John’s Street
I have many fantastic memories of visiting my grandparents, aunties and uncles, cousins who lived and still live there. My Bampi worked in the butchers at the top of the hill, My hero, my dad, was a butcher as well but he also ...Read more
A memory of Ogmore Vale by
Sun, Sea & Sandhills At Gronant
I remember going on our holiday in dad's car to Nan & Grandad's holiday bungalows, driving over the railway bridge and on to what I always knew as Gronant (The Warren). The first thing we would see would be the ...Read more
A memory of Gronant in 1966 by
Waiting For The Bus
As a small child and a grown woman with children of my own I remember waiting for the Wakefield bus after a visit to my grandparents. Some times it would be the West Riding bus, at other times it was the United one. Until his ...Read more
A memory of Hemsworth by
Aspro Bowling Green
Surely this is Aspro's bowling green? along Bath Rd., houses must be Westgate Cres or Ivy Cres. Pals dad was gardener to Aspros. was it built beside Aspros cricket pitch?
A memory of Cippenham by
An Old Mans Memories
I was born in 1922 in the village of Mundford. My Father was the village policeman. The village was then a self-contained society and provided all the necessities of life, including a doctor, blacksmith, carpenter and general ...Read more
A memory of Mundford in 1920 by
Pollards Swimming Club
I was born in Thornton Heath in the late 1940's and learned to swim at an early age. My next-door neighbour, who was a couple of years older than me, was a member of Pollards Swimming Club and persuaded me to join as ...Read more
A memory of Thornton Heath by
Lennard's
Hi my name is Peter McGuire and i went to Lennard's from 1960 to 1965 My class was in upper 4A in the science lab at the back of the school. The teacher was Farrier (not sure of spelling) who left us in our year of GCE's . It may ...Read more
A memory of South Ockendon by
My Story
My name is Peter Mills. I was born in 1939 and I lived in Barest Road, Nunhead. I lived through the war years, evacuation, hiding in the Anderson shelter, having to use the bungalow bath, outside toilet, coal fire, ascot water heater, ...Read more
A memory of Peckham in 1950 by
Captions
1,059 captions found. Showing results 121 to 144.
Bathing machines await customers.
The Bugle Hotel c1955 Although Yarmouth never really devel- oped as a traditional seaside resort, there are stretches of sand available for bath- ing.
Bathing tents dot the beach at Viking Bay, while two bathing machines stand at the water's edge.
Hugh Lupus, the first of the Norman earls of Chester, is said to have ordered the construction of a weir so that the mills would have a regular source of water power.
During the 19th century Stafford's borough council was desperately seeking new fresh water supplies for the town.
Leamington's development as a spa did not begin until 1789, when William Abbotts discovered a mineral spring on his land in what is now Bath Street.
This view shows the end of the Crescent Hotel and the Thermal Baths (right), and was taken from Spring Gardens.
These were the days of the fortnight by the sea - bucket and spade holidays with simple activities.
By the end of the Great War the town had lost many of its young men—they had marched away past the Steamer Hotel along Dock Street to the railway station.
By 1918 Margate Council had become envious of Pettman's monopoly of bathing at Cliftonville and made a charge for the bathing rights and the hiring of deckchairs on the popular Cliftonville beaches
This photograph could well be a study in oils, but the church of St Lawrence, standing next to the canal, is said to be large and uninspired.
The river Sow surrounds Stafford on three sides.
Leamington's development as a spa did not begin until 1789, when William Abbotts discovered a mineral spring on his land in what is now Bath Street.
Weymouth became popular as a seaside resort thanks to the patronage of King George III, who came to bathe here for the good of his health.
Hunstanton had been described in the 1860s as 'a compact little watering place with everything on a miniature scale - a little railway station, six or seven bathing machines etc...'
Cleanliness in the 12th and 13th centuries was certainly next to Godliness.The Cistercians, like the Knights Templar, were not noted for their standards of personal hygiene and rarely washed.
Once a port described by Daniel Defoe as 'fairer, and much deeper, than those at Watchet and Porlock', it turned into a major seaside bathing resort in the later 19th century.
This is the chief Mersey bathing-place, which at once gains and loses by its proximity to the great commercial city of Liverpool.
This building stands at the northern end of The Parade; it was built in 1926 on the site of a former coaching inn, the Pengwern Arms, which had to be demolished in 1885 following storm damage.
Cleanliness in the 12th and 13th centuries was certainly next to Godliness.The Cistercians, like the Knights Templar, were not noted for their standards of personal hygiene and rarely washed.
The cars and dress may be different, but a day by the sea changes little over the years.
The first swimming baths in Stourbridge opened in 1901.
Rivacre Valley Swimming Pool was one of the main attractions within the 45-acre site that comprised Rivacre Valley.
We see sandcastles, deck chairs, gentlemen paddling with their trousers tucked up, and ladies doing the same whilst carrying their shoes.
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