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 1,241 to 49.
Maps
88 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 1,489 to 1.
Memories
1,483 memories found. Showing results 621 to 630.
Tees Street Sunderland
hey new at this game, have traveled the world,both with the army and as a security adviser to many arab and african nations but i was born and grew up on the bombed out streets of wear tyne and tees streets, the town moor was ...Read more
A memory of Ryhope by
Longriggend
I visited my Grandpa who lived at Greta-Lea Cottage in Main St, with my Mother , I remember getting off the bus at the swing park , usually having a wee go on a swing first, then walking along the road .I remember how the stars seemed ...Read more
A memory of Longriggend
Family
My family on both my mother and father's side at one time came from Whitchurch. My gran and great granny were born there. My great granny never left the town in all of her 92 years,she died in 1948 after having 11 children. Looking at these ...Read more
A memory of Whitchurch by
Shoeburyness Boats
In the picture of three children in a boat at Shoeburyness. Looking at it I'm sure the little girl is me. If so I have an idea who the two boys are as well. Is there anyone that knows who they are. How I wish it was larger. Thank you for all the lovely photos
A memory of Shoeburyness by
Cafe/ Milk Bar
I worked for awhile in Oswestry as a teenager wiring the telephone exchange up with a team. We stayed in lodgingsin the week in town, not far from the park. I cannot remember their surname but Derek and June were their first names. They ...Read more
A memory of Oswestry by
Nursing Home
I was born at the Duchess of Connaught Nursing Home in Bagshot in 1943 and my Mother remembered my Father paying a quick visit and being told off for hanging his Army coat on the door!
A memory of Bagshot by
Monksbarn Children’s Home
Me my 2 brothers and my sister were at monksbarn in the 60,s I remember the sweet cupboard and the large staircase where we kept our shoes and coats. Also the school I have some good memories of that place and the people
A memory of Reading by
Wonderful Days
We spent all our warm summer holidays at Westgate. We lived in South London. My Grandmother lived in Quex Road and we had a caravan on St Crispens caravan site. I loved getting fish heads from the fish monger to go ...Read more
A memory of Westgate on Sea by
Growing Up In Foxton Cambridgeshire
How a Family that came to south Cambridgeshire Clifford John Masters, My Story I was born in 4 Chaucer Cottages Foxton on the 9th February 1940 The houses backed onto the “park” ...Read more
A memory of Barrington by
Yacht "Albion"
This boat was called Albion, I remember her well as I spent my childhood in Cardnell's yard either sailing the family boat or fitting it out -(some of the happiest days of my life) - she was pale green, an unusual colour for a boat as ...Read more
A memory of Maylandsea
Captions
1,648 captions found. Showing results 1,489 to 1,512.
The designers certainly pushed the boat out: their 1893 facade is stylishly Italianate, with lots of carved stonework, banded arches and granite columns.
A London-registered boat is on the left, and Warehouse Number 1 stands beyond that.
In the 1970s evidence was unearthed that as early as March 1777 the authorities in Liverpool had given orders for repairs to 'the boat, which was formerly ordered to be built and kept at Formby in readiness
It becomes very shallow at this broad and sandy estuary, restricting boat movements to a brief period at high tide.
This view and 27204, pages 72-73 are well away from the town; the banks are consequently more thinly populated and the boats, punts and skiffs far fewer than one might expect.
In 1800, Aberaeron was little more than a farm and inn by the main coast road where a bridge crossed the Aeron.
On the extreme right is one of the winches used by local fishermen to haul their boats up the shingle beach above the high water mark, since Deal had no harbour of its own.
The man in the boat has maybe rowed across to pick samphire from the muddy creeks; this is a local plant, a delicacy called 'poor mans asparagus'.
Boats could enter the castle through the water gate, as there was a small quay to the rear of the tower.
This former fishing village, situated on the south coast of the Lleyn Peninsula, now hosts boats of a much more upmarket kind.
During the late 17th century, Greenock's herring trade with France and the Baltic required a fleet of more than 300 boats.
At the northern end of the Staffordshire & Worcester Canal, an unusual pleasure boat conversion heads towards Wolverhampton.
The little harbour of Burry Port was in times past a busy export terminal for tin and fine anthracite coal.
Shelly sea sand was carried inland for spreading on acid soils by tub boats: we can see one in the foreground.
A paddle-tug gives a helping hand to two fishing boats.
The white building beyond the sailing boat (center left) is Wardley's Hotel.
In his comic novel Three Men in a Boat, Jerome K Jerome vividly describes such a scene as this.
Henley was ahead in that game - its Regatta was a master-stroke, for it was founded by the citizens well before the great late Victorian and Edwardian boating boom; a boom depicted so wonderfully
Not only were rowing boats, racing skiffs and dinghies a common sight, but there was even a time when the lake had its own paddle steamer.
At Gloucester, boats and barges, carrying mainly timber and grain, could pass into the basin by way of a lock.
The horses are steadied from the front by the ferryman, and the driver holds the reins in case the animals bolt: it is a chain ferry, drawn through the water by a steam-driven boat alongside, so a sudden
Silting up has made it difficult for large vessels to continue to use Palnackie port, and visits have been restricted in recent years to smaller pleasure craft, and more modest fishing and cockling boats
A smockmill with a weatherboarded tower, boat shaped cap and octagonal brick base, and powered by four patent shuttered sails and winded by a fantail, it was built beside a millpond; a waterwheel was added
The children in the boat have been identified as Leslie, Harry and Noel Wren, whilst Millie Wren sits on the riverbank with a neighbour.
Places (14)
Photos (49)
Memories (1483)
Books (1)
Maps (88)