Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Devil's Bridge, Dyfed
- Menai Bridge, Gwynedd
- Hebden Bridge, Yorkshire
- Pateley Bridge, Yorkshire
- Sowerby Bridge, Yorkshire
- Bamber Bridge, Lancashire
- Bridge of Allan, Central Scotland
- Victoria Bridge, County Tyrone
- Two Mile Bridge, Republic of Ireland
- Greta Bridge, Durham
- Three Bridges, Sussex
- Newby Bridge, Cumbria
- Bridge, Kent
- Marple Bridge, Greater Manchester
- Wootton Bridge, Isle of Wight
- Woodford Bridge, Greater London
- Dunsop Bridge, Lancashire
- Forth Bridge, Lothian
- Haydon Bridge, Northumberland
- Shotley Bridge, Durham
- Wisemans Bridge, Dyfed
- Two Bridges, Devon
- Stanford Bridge, Hereford & Worcester
- Mylor Bridge, Cornwall
- Calder Bridge, Cumbria
- Whaley Bridge, Derbyshire
- Kerne Bridge, Hereford & Worcester
- Stamford Bridge, Yorkshire
- Drift Bridge, Surrey
- Cowan Bridge, Lancashire
- Acton Bridge, Cheshire
- Stow Bridge, Norfolk
- Penny Bridge, Cumbria
- Four Mile Bridge, Gwynedd
- Eamont Bridge, Cumbria
- Sutton Bridge, Lincolnshire
Photos
10,057 photos found. Showing results 121 to 140.
Maps
1,153 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
2,061 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.
Along Row From Home
I n 1965 my parents retired to Saltash and my father built himself a small boat. As it was moored off the end of the garden. He looked around for a dingy to get to and fro and eventually found one in Gunnislake. Guess who got ...Read more
A memory of Gunnislake by
Boyhood Memories Of Lymington
My parents, Edward (Jack) and Mavis Byard and myself and German Shepherd Dog Julie, moved from Poole, in Dorset, to live in a de-commissioned British Power Boat Motor Torpedo Boat, 451, in November 1947. My father ...Read more
A memory of Lymington by
My Boyhood Memories. With My Grandad
I hope that anyone left of my family can read this, as now being 72 , I lost all track of coming to Kent. My home town was Lytham St Annes where my mother lived and dad was in the RAF and met my mother there. My ...Read more
A memory of Faversham by
Family Connections.
The lady standing on the bridge is my great grandmother Hannah Elton nee Churchill and the small boy her grandson, Cecil Henry Stickland, my uncle. He became the verger at Christchurch Priory. Hannah lived with her ...Read more
A memory of Wimborne Minster by
Ice Cream
My parents and I spent several vacations at Higworth farm caravan camp in the early/ mid 50's. I remember my Father having to get out of the coach, along with others, to lighten the load to cross the bridge. On the way to the beach ...Read more
A memory of Hayling Island
Bagpuss
A section of this photograph was used by Peter Firmin and Oliver Postgate for one of the opening sequences in the programme Bagpuss. This was confirmed in 1978 when a Horrabridge resident wrote to the Bagpuss programme and received a ...Read more
A memory of Horrabridge by
The Hersham Flood – September 1968
During the 60s I lived in Surbiton and worked in Hersham. As I was getting ready to leave for work one morning in 1968, a radio broadcast warned of severe flooding along the Mole valley following heavy rains, and ...Read more
A memory of Hersham by
Walking In The River
From the concrete slab bridge by the watercress beds to the park near Scots Hill we would wade in the river with bare feet, I was only nine years old then. The river bed was a fine golden grit that was easy to walk on. ...Read more
A memory of Rickmansworth in 1948 by
The Boats We Looked After
While my family lived in the lock house 1950 - 1961, my father rented the rowing boats out and also the fishing permits. This is only one place where they were moored. At various times they were both sides of the bridge and ...Read more
A memory of Harlow in 1950 by
On The Way To The Cathedral School
I still see the journey from my home in Morecambe to start my senior school years. First the bus from my home on Regent Road to the Midland Hotel. Then, across to the station for the train to Green Ayre station. ...Read more
A memory of Lancaster by
Captions
2,231 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.
Apart from the wintry ice of a semi-frozen Thames, this view from Savoy Pier shows the old Waterloo Bridge, which was designed by Sir John Rennie and completed in 1817.
This is a fascinating photograph, because it shows both the railway bridge (built in 1868; it even had a pedestrian walkway along it) and the transporter bridge in front.
The bridge was built in 1863 to replace the ferries that had been used to cross the river since the Middle Ages. The shields on either side depict the arms of the Diocese of York.
With its five arches, this ragstone bridge over the River Medway is said to be the finest medieval bridge in the south of England.
The bridge carries the road over the River Deben, where a short-lived quay was built in the 19th century. A bridge of 1764 was replaced by this one of white brick and stone in 1798.
The Transport Bridge Company was formed in 1899, and parliamentary approval was given in July 1900. Widnes Corporation gave £25,000 towards the scheme, and Runcorn gave £10,000.
We are looking downstream from the lock towards a bridge over the river by-pass channel.
Felton stands on the north bank of the Coquet, and it was here that the Great North Road once crossed the river by way of the old bridge featured in the picture.
The bridge was built by the Bishop of Salisbury around 1240 to facilitate trade between the new city and the south: the Cathedral spire can be seen in the background.
At 4,162ft from end to end, the Severn Railway Bridge was the longest bridge in England when it opened.
The bridge has hardly changed during the thirty years that separate our photographs.
The long bridge over the wide Usk river separates Crickhowell from the neighbouring village of Llangattock.
Victoria Bridge, on the Severn Valley railway line from Bewdley to Bridgnorth, has a span of 200 feet; when it was built in 1862, it was considered the largest cast iron single arch bridge in the world
Part of the 'deal' whereby Oxfordshire surrendered Caversham to Reading in 1911 was the rebuilding of the sub-standard 1869 bridge.
Blackfriars Bridge was completed in 1869, but it was widened to its present width by extending the west side in 1910.
There has been a bridge here for hundreds of years, but the present one was built in the early 19th century. 9ft wide, and with a central span of 9 yards, it is typical of moorland bridges
The packhorse bridge over the Kinder River just outside Hayfield is also known locally as the Roman Bridge, but there is no evidence that Roman legionaries used it.
The bridge was not always as level, strong and wide as this.
This is not, in fact a Roman bridge at all, but was probably built in the 18th century.
This is the approach road from the Barrow in Furness direction to Newby Bridge, now the A590, with the Swan Hotel on the far side of the bridge.
Here we can have a closer look at the famous bridge, with a group of boys fishing by the bandstand (left).
Gnosall also had two canal-side pubs, the Boat Inn by Bridge No 34, and the Navigation Inn by Bridge No 35.
The elegant cutwaters of this bridge speak volumes for the bridge-builders' art.
Tower Bridge has become a virtual symbol of London, and it is certainly a very striking and remarkable structure.
Places (284)
Photos (10057)
Memories (2061)
Books (0)
Maps (1153)