Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Shanklin, Isle of Wight
- Ventnor, Isle of Wight
- Ryde, Isle of Wight
- Cowes, Isle of Wight
- Sandown, Isle of Wight
- Port of Ness, Western Isles
- London, Greater London
- Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
- Dublin, Republic of Ireland
- Killarney, Republic of Ireland
- Douglas, Isle of Man
- Plymouth, Devon
- Newport, Isle of Wight
- Southwold, Suffolk
- Bristol, Avon
- Lowestoft, Suffolk
- Cromer, Norfolk
- Edinburgh, Lothian
- Maldon, Essex
- Clacton-On-Sea, Essex
- Norwich, Norfolk
- Felixstowe, Suffolk
- Hitchin, Hertfordshire
- Stevenage, Hertfordshire
- Colchester, Essex
- Nottingham, Nottinghamshire
- Bedford, Bedfordshire
- Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
- Aldeburgh, Suffolk
- St Albans, Hertfordshire
- Hunstanton, Norfolk
- Chelmsford, Essex
- Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire
- Peterborough, Cambridgeshire
- Brentwood, Essex
- Glengarriff, Republic of Ireland
Photos
11,144 photos found. Showing results 14,941 to 11,144.
Maps
181,031 maps found.
Books
442 books found. Showing results 17,929 to 17,952.
Memories
29,040 memories found. Showing results 7,471 to 7,480.
Earlswood Lakes
My Sunday School first took us all to Earlswood Lakes in 1949. I loved it there but it was way too cold to swim. We went again in 1952 and took a boat out on the lake, it was so cold but so much fun, my poor mother froze, and said ...Read more
A memory of Ashtead in 1952 by
Memories Of A Descendant Of A Bratton Fleming Family
Although I live in Canada, I have a sentimental attachment to Bratton Fleming, where my grandmother, born Melia Ann Parkin, was born long ago. This attachment was fostered by my seeing ...Read more
A memory of Bratton Fleming by
The Cottage Hospital
I had my right knee stitched up here after being kicked by one of my Dad's racehorses in July 1949
A memory of Richmond in 1949 by
Trevor Living There Practically All My Life
Further to Gary's memory I was the Julie that he lived next door to but my surname was Evans. For practically all of my life I have lived in Trevor and still see many of the people that I grew up with. ...Read more
A memory of Trevor in 2009 by
The Old Hall
My father was in the US Air Force and we rented an apartment from Lady Stickland in the Old Hall. I went to the local school and was asked to play Snow White in the pantomime. We were in Snettisham when President Kennedy was ...Read more
A memory of Snettisham by
Doodlebug Amen Corner
Does anyone out there remember the flying bomb that dropped on the corner of Idlecombe and Southcroft Roads in July 1944?
A memory of Tooting in 1944 by
Samples Yard
I used to live a few doors from auld Jimmy Sample and his wife Carrie, his son John was married to June and they lived in Francis Terrace. They had their rag and bone yard down the Winnin, anyway I would spend summer nights, weekends ...Read more
A memory of Newburn in 1955 by
Blacksmith Arms Ghost
In 1978 my sister-in-law Diane Plaskitt worked in the kitchens at the pub. During her time there along with another member of staff they came across 'the Blacksmith Ghost'. They caught site of an image of a man ...Read more
A memory of Rothwell in 1978 by
Summer 1967
You werent dreaming Patricia! - they were there and they are still there from Easter to the end of September. They are on the beach walking from Cawsand to Kingsand and then on for half a mile or so towards Plymouth. They are as loved now as they ever were. Best Wishes Gillian
A memory of Cawsand in 1967 by
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Captions
29,395 captions found. Showing results 17,929 to 17,952.
The Bowder Stone, a 2,000-ton boulder which was transported to near Grange-in-Borrowdale by Ice Age glaciers, has been a source of wonder tourists for centuries.
Milton Malsor is a charming, typically English village to the south of Northampton and the M1. This picture shows the village post office, delightfully housed in a picturesque thatched cottage.
Continuing along the west side of the River Nene as it heads north-east, we reach Islip. The river forms the parish boundary with Thrapston, now a small industrial town on the east bank.
The Victorian Gothic pile of a country house is now Overstone Park School, situated in the centre of the vast park. This view was taken by the eastern lake.
Stanwick is a village two miles south-west of Raunds. In 1960 Phipps was taken over by the giant Watney-Mann brewery, which retained the Phipps name but introduced the lettering shown here.
This view up Parish Road affords a glimpse of what was a centre of communication for the village.
The buildings to the right of the gateway, which led in from the Market Place, were part of the District Council offices.
Originally, College Green was the burial ground for the Augustinian abbey, founded by Robert Fitzhardinge in 1148, and for a hospital, founded jointly by Maurice Berkeley of Gaunt and his nephew, Robert
Joseph Fry senior had been involved in a number of business ventures and partnerships, but as a Quaker the manufacture of chocolate was especially important to him, as it was a temperance drink.
Because of the height of the clerestory, the east-facing clock face had to be sited higher up the tower than those on the other sides.
By the end of the 19th century, the cove was already attracting a great many visitors.
In 1810, Lewis Tregonwell built a holiday home on lonely heathland, close to the mouth of the River Bourne.
However, many of the county's hamlets and smaller villages were heavily dependent upon visits from retailers operating mobile shops.
The earlier houses built at Port Sunlight were a mixture of styles. The village had a pub, the Bridge Inn, which was designed to look like an old coaching inn, but opened as a temperance hotel.
Long Meg and her Daughters, a Bronze Age monument near Little Salkeld, is the largest stone circle in the Lake District, and one of the biggest in Britain.
However, nothing remains of its great monastic church. Along Thames Street, east of the town's medieval river bridge, abbey buildings remain.
All survives, including the terrace of boathouses and the central building, now reduced to two storeys by the removal of the weatherboarded upper storey; it is now the Richmond Canoe Club.
South-east of Abingdon, on the A415 and a mile west of the Culham Science Centre, the former Culham College is a large and austere Victorian Gothic building based on an Oxford collegiate layout with a
Marlow, and Henley further up river, were important inland ports handling mainly the corn, malt and timber of the Chiltern Hills behind them.
The Embankment, with its dolphin lampposts dated 1870, is by Bazalgette; in fact it hides the great sewers he built to collect London's effluent and take it further east to rid the city of its appalling
Though St Mary's contains a Norman chancel arch, much of the building dates from John Dobson's restoration of 1828-29.
The fine old farmhouse sits on a brick base and is hung with tiles and swathed in creeper.
During the Second World War it was used as an officer training unit, but when peace came it was allowed to stand empty and neglected for about six years, leaving much of the building a ruin.
St Giles' Church is over 800 years old and accepted as one of the most attractive in England.
Places (6814)
Photos (11144)
Memories (29040)
Books (442)
Maps (181031)