Places
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Photos
2 photos found. Showing results 121 to 2.
Maps
9 maps found.
Books
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Memories
492 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.
Pentalardd Our Own Smallholding In Maesycrugiau
We moved to Pentalardd in Carmarthenshire (near Llanybydder) when I was 15 years old. My parents had sold our home near Addlestone Surrey as we wanted to live on our own smallholding in the Welsh ...Read more
A memory of Caio in 1967 by
Pentalardd Maesycrugiau Our Own Smallholding Neay Llanybydder Nbsp Nbsp
We moved to Pentalardd in Carmarthenshire (near Llanybydder) when I was 15 years old. My parents had sold our home near Addlestone Surrey as we wanted to live on our own ...Read more
A memory of Llanybydder in 1967 by
2 Years In The Village
Sometime around 1956, for about two years, two of us shared a cottage in Iford village (one of the first two as you came off the main road from Lewes). We worked for Mr Robinson milking his Guernsey herd and doing ...Read more
A memory of Iford in 1956 by
Brook Farm Caravan Site
As a young lad, I enjoyed many happy holidays at Brook Farm Caravan Site in Nansen Road, Holland-on Sea, where my parents owned a caravan. This site was very quiet and superbly unspoilt with nothing but a small shop ...Read more
A memory of Holland-on-Sea in 1965
Our Honeymoon
These pictures bring back delightful memories! We spent a week of our honeymoon in the 16th century mill at Lydia Bridge. Across the lawn was a view of the brook and early spring flowers. We stepped outside to the sound of the ...Read more
A memory of South Brent in 1999 by
Good Times
We came down from Scotland to Stoke in 1953 as my dad had got a job in the newly opened Pit Hem Heath. As children we used to stay at the house which is sitting in front of the pit . We used to go across the brook on the pipe what ran ...Read more
A memory of Hem Heath in 1960 by
Police House 1939 45
The Police House was located on Radcliffe Road, Cropwell Butler. (now called 'The Old Police House'). On the front wall it bore a sign bearing the words 'County Police'. From 1939 to 1945 it was occupied by the ...Read more
A memory of Cropwell Butler in 1940 by
Where I Lived In 1960
We moved into the flat above Snodland station on 9th January 1960 (my 8th birthday) and the extreme left upstairs window was the view from our lounge (or, rather - sitting room). I attended Brook Street CoE Primary school ...Read more
A memory of Snodland in 1960 by
Little Sutton In 1950s And 1960s
What memories your comments conjure. How I loved the 'rec' as a child. We started on the 'baby swings' and progressed to the 'big swings' and see-saw and round-a-bout. The old shelter there was a favourite ...Read more
A memory of Little Sutton in 1960 by
The Crisswell Family
I would like to ask whether anyone might be able to help me piece together a mystery. Five weeks ago, whilst walking through the local Derby countryside, my wife and I discovered a briefcase dumped in a brook. There were ...Read more
A memory of Newmarket by
Captions
255 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.
A blacksmith's forge used to stand beside this packhorse bridge spanning Winn Brook, one of eight bridges boasted by this tiny village.
The shop on the right of this photograph is Hermitage Post Office and Stores.
The bridge carries the Padiham road over Sabden Brook into the village.
Back across the river, via the Batheaston toll bridge, follow the Avon south before turning right to Monkton Combe, a delightful village nestling in the valley of the Midford Brook.
This is a beautiful example of the mixing of stone and timberwork that is typical of many houses that snuggle amongst the hills of southern Shropshire.
Next to the thatched cottages on the left is the White Hart pub.
Originally, the fire station was at the southern end of Mill Street, next to the Salvation Army Hall.
The Mill C1960 Izaak Walton fished here in the Meon, reflecting that the valley 'exceeds all England for swift, shallow, clear, pleasant brooks and store of trout'.
As we look back towards Cookham from near the viewpoint of photograph No 77588 towards the bridge onto Odney, since rebuilt, the Thames is beyond the trees with its two channels.
The bridge carries the Padiham road over Sabden Brook into the village.
Now a hotel, the Old Court House was built by Sir Robert Brooke - he had bought the estate for £946 (an enormous sum of money for the times) following the dissolution of the monasteries by Henry VIII
The Kettle Brook 1898 A short walk from The Harrow pub at Steep brings you to this delightful spot at the heart of hilly East Hampshire, sometimes described as 'Little Switzerland'.
Delph and Dobcross were two of the principal villages within Saddleworth.
The name Ewelme derives from an Old English word meaning 'spring'.
Taken almost from the bottom of High Street, many of these buildings are unchanged a century later, even if their uses have.
The old Mill House (centre) was demolished in 1966.
This view, looking along the Roath Brook, does not give much idea of the park's scale.
The foremost stream in this area is Plants Brook, which once powered several mills.
In this still mainly rural area, names redolent of the country abound: Pewter House Fold, Smalley Fold, Hubbersty Fold (like 'booth', 'fold' means a cowhouse or animal pen).
Finchingfield combines a water supply (Finchingfield Brook) with a defensible site (Church Hill).
The brook here somehow appears to be little cared for, with its chipped concrete posts arrayed along weedy banks.
There could not be anywhere more northern-sounding than Mytholmroyd, the woollen village crammed into the bottom of the Calder Valley west of Halifax.
Standing on a plateau overlooking the Arun Valley, Amberley is often described as 'the pearl of Sussex' and 'the loveliest village in Sussex'.
Entering the village from Clitheroe, the road dips to cross Heys Brook.
Places (2)
Photos (2)
Memories (492)
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Maps (9)