Places
9 places found.
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Photos
366 photos found. Showing results 121 to 140.
Maps
99 maps found.
Books
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Memories
381 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.
Happiest Early Days
I grew up in Elmstead Market moving there when I was 18 months old and left in 1965 when I was 8. I went to Elmstead School where Vera Norfolk was my first teacher and the headteacher was Mr Clegg. Vera's sister Muriel ran the ...Read more
A memory of Elmstead by
School Years
All my school years were spent at st barts on tatton st 1949 to easter 1959 I think my most memorable time was when we went to the isle of man for a weak whith harry holmes who was head master at the time
A memory of Salford in 1959 by
Harts Hill, Brierley Hill, West Midlands
Before Gordon Crescent and Terrace Street estate was built my Great Grandfather owned a cottage at the end of Terrace Street. It was called Harts Hill Cottage and was quite substantial and was double ...Read more
A memory of Brierley Hill
Joe Wyche
I remember Joe Wyche very, very well; a very progressive man, and to be frank I owe my success to him. At age thirteen he hauled me into his office to inform me I was lazy and he was going to make me work. In consequence I did work ...Read more
A memory of Poynton in 1956 by
The Hough
when I was about a year old I moved to the Hough from Englesea Brook, where my parents lived for a couple of years. I went to school at Shavington and was good friends with John Addison, Alan Giller (the latter ...Read more
A memory of Hough by
Good Times
I came across this site today and was taken back to my childhood. I was born in Netherfield at 21, Hodgkinson Street in September 1957, the daughter of Brian and Barbera Pritchett, and 2 years later had a brother ...Read more
A memory of Netherfield by
Pincents Hill
I remember Pincents Hill and surrending area in the 1950s. We would walk up through the city and down Pincents Hill, past the farm with a small pond. On the left was a long gravel avenue that was lined with poplars down to Calcot. ...Read more
A memory of Tilehurst in 1950 by
Horse & Cart
My father, Thomas Armstrong, had a greengrocer's business that he used to deliver by horse & cart. He lived for a long time on Wyngate Road, Cheadle Hulme. I remember when we had the greengrocer's in Hulme, Manchester that he ...Read more
A memory of Cheadle Hulme in 1960 by
School Holidays In Kinver
We had a caravan in Kingsford Lane, Kinver from 1960 to about 1963, my dad bought it from someone in Wollaston and we used to stay there all the school holidays and weekends and my dad would go to work from there to Fry's ...Read more
A memory of Kinver in 1960 by
My Home
The White Hart was my home for many years until I married. My father and mother managed the White Hart for over 25 years and are both at rest now in Cheadle parish church. I have seen many changes both in the village and the ...Read more
A memory of Cheadle in 1960 by
Captions
276 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.
The White Hart (left) contained what was probably the oldest letter box.
Nearby are two other inns,The White Hart and The Snooty Fox.
During the Second World War, the fighter pilots based at Biggin Hill used to congregate at the Victorian White Hart pub further down the street.
photographer's activity (right), while her offspring watches from her hooded perambulator; they are on the hill leading towards the 11th-century Saxon church of All Saints and the 200-year-old White Hart
today; Lloyd's Bank (centre left), which took over the earlier Devon and Cornwall Bank, built in 1832; Hicks and Son (left), who still run their drapery business from the same premises; and the White Hart
Hart and Smith next to each other seem to sell just about everything anyone could want - postcards, wooden hoops, newspapers, parasols, toys and groceries.
The Whyte Harte has a rendered and colourwashed front over a Tudor timber-frame (it may be earlier: there is a date, 1388, on the building), and it is obviously the supplier of stirrup cups to the
Behind the town hall is the White Hart Hotel, which was demolished in 1935 and replaced by shops and offices.
Centre, on the horizon, is All Hallows Church, and near it is Hart House.
The ashlar stone building with a Cotswold-tiled mansard roof, on the left, contrasts with the half-timbered White Hart Hotel down on the right and with the well-proportioned three-storey building situated
This sizeable hamlet on the Downs south of Harting has no church, but boasts some attractive flint cottages and fine scenery.There is plenty of history here: Bow Hill was a great Stone Age centre
The White Hart beyond, with its tall chimneys, was run by Dick Powling as a family and commercial hotel.
The ashlar stone building with a Cotswold-tiled mansard roof, on the left, contrasts with the half-timbered White Hart Hotel down on the right and with the well-proportioned three-storey building situated
The pub in the distance is still the White Hart, but the petrol station has gone.
The pub in the distance is still the White Hart, but the petrol station has gone.
There are two old coaching inns in the High Street: the 14th-century George and the White Hart.
This old shepherd, plodding on to Walsingham market, has been enjoying a glass of ale in the 'White Hart'.
This wide, curving street set on a sandy ridge runs downhill to the 16th-century White Hart Inn.
There are two old coaching inns in the High Street: the 14th-century George and the White Hart.
The White Hart is shown on a town map of 1839 and is likely to be 15th-century in origin.
The White Hart on the left survives, as, of course, does St Peter's church beyond the neo-Georgian shopping parade.
To the right, the shop with the Hovis sign is still a baker's; Jacksons has been rebuilt but remains an ironmonger's; and further on, the White Hart has become shops.
Facing the end of the street beyond the White Hart, the huge block reflects the confidence and wealth generated in the town by the china clay industry.
Telegraph Hill, which is 534 feet high.The Norman church of St Mary was rebuilt in 1849, with a timber bell turret and a shingled spire.THis photograph shows the old coaching inn on the Emsworth to Harting
Places (9)
Photos (366)
Memories (381)
Books (0)
Maps (99)