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Maps
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Books
163 books found. Showing results 1,801 to 1,824.
Memories
22,898 memories found. Showing results 751 to 760.
The Village Of Fond Childhood Memories (1955 )
I would have been three years old back then, living, as we did, at 77 High Street with my grandparents (the Dentons). Harry (my grandfather) used to keep bees and was regularly praised for his ...Read more
A memory of Sutton Courtenay in 1955 by
The Red Lion Inn Thursley
I lived in The Red Lion Inn, Thursley (Bridle Cottage) from the day I was born for approximately 22 years. I was born in June 1961 and I am the oldest child of four. I lived with my parents and grandparents. My ...Read more
A memory of Thursley in 1961 by
Sholden Kent Near Deal Kent. 1810 91 Norris Marsh & Berwick Family
George James Norris and his wife Charlotte, nee Halliday, lived at Alders, Sholden with their 5 children in 1891. Miss Sarah Norrice who was living with her mother Ursula at Sholden in ...Read more
A memory of Deal
Bristol's Cabot's Tower
Bristol's Cabot's Tower, and the penny pinching Council. Bristol's most prominent land mark, the Cabot Tower, was 100 years old in 1998. But the official opening was marked by a disastrous fire, a confidence trick and ...Read more
A memory of Bristol in 1890 by
Victorian Horse Drawn Omnibus On The Park Street
This shows an early Victorian horse-drawn omnibus on the Park Street, Clifton, City Centre Bristol Zoo route. The fleet commenced with various horse trailers, totalling 109 with 678 horses. These ...Read more
A memory of Bristol in 1900 by
Happy Childhood In Crouch End
This is how I remember the Broadway from the eyes of a very small child walking around with my mum's gloved hand securely holding mine and my nan and my sister walking along with our dog Pepi. We would either be ...Read more
A memory of Crouch End in 1965 by
Betton A Rural Idyl
I literally stumbled upon this website and have been interested to read the memories of people who lived in Betton, a place well known to me. I lived there as a wartime evacuee in the 1940s, and Marc Chrysanthou's ...Read more
A memory of Market Drayton in 1940 by
Bacon Family
My family lived in Hawkedon from about the mid-1880s and came from Kirtling, Cambs. I know that they ran the Queen's Head and I think my grandmother helped to teach at the local school. My mother's family (Bacon) were all born at ...Read more
A memory of Hawkedon in 1870 by
The Ritz Cinama
At the end of Darkes Lane, on the corner of Byng Drive, the Ritz Cinema was built and opened in 1934. My father was the cinema foreman from then until 1939. It had an elevated organ and songs were played on it with the words ...Read more
A memory of Potters Bar in 1930 by
Pc David Deal
My husband's great-grandfather David Deal was one of the police constables for Leiston and is mentioned in the 1901 Census aged 39 living with his wife Marianna and two of their three children at Valley Road, Leiston. My husband ...Read more
A memory of Leiston in 1900 by
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 1,801 to 1,824.
At Romney Lock, a Salter Brothers' passenger steamer – the 'Nuneham' – heads towards Windsor Bridge.
This reconstructed wayside cross stands on the old highway between Worcester and Evesham. Only the steps, base and shaft of the original remains the rest having been destroyed at some time in history.
At the height of the coaching era, Maidenhead was littered with posting inns either side of the High Street. Some of these hotels continued to thrive during the age of the motor car.
Commanded by Capt J T Ross, the Belfast Steamship Company's express passenger steamship SS 'Dynamic' carries the Belfast Harbour Commissioners on their annual inspection in 1896.
In Eliza Street, a number of children are at play.
On the right is the Town Hall in all its Gothic splendour, which was completed in 1873 at a cost of £100,000.
Sir George also designed the physics laboratory at the Royal Fort, which was opened by Lord Rutherford in 1927.
At this time, the buildings on the right are awaiting their fate - they were eventually pulled down. But they themselves had their origins in encroachment on the original larger medieval market place.
There used to be two churches in Histon, but St Etheldreda's, not far from this one, St Andrew's, was demolished in 1588 to provide materials for a new wing at Madingley Hall.
Thomas Arnold, the headmaster of Rugby School, immortalised in 'Tom Brown's Schooldays', was born at Cowes in 1796.
There used to be two churches in Histon, but St Etheldreda's, not far from this one, St Andrew's, was demolished in 1588 to provide materials for a new wing at Madingley Hall.
A horse looks with interest at the two little boys in the road. The old road to Camelford and beyond, later becoming the A39, climbs steeply up Gonvena Hill from the bridge.
RECORDS of a harbour in Margate go back to the 14th century, when it appears to have been a small wooden structure sheltering the local fishing vessels.
Because the square was the home of many businesses, the rank would usually be a busy place, with customers coming and going.
Following the death of Admiral Chaloner's widow, Amelia, in 1902, the Gisborough estate was inherited by Richard Godolphin Hume Chaloner, later created First Lord or Baron Gisborough.
Today most of this area is covered by housing, part of the expansion of the town since the mid 1970s. On the left is Tuns Passage.
Although resented at first, the State Management Scheme soon became a badge of the city and brought many benefits.
The auction, which was held in Macclesfield in October 1938, was a spectacular failure, so much so that less than a tenth of the lots were sold.
This view shows part of the original castle moat, which was drained in 1862. At that time the rose garden was created, which lies within this beautiful woodland setting.
This view of the High Street at the Cross shows the war memorial (right). The Express Parcels Service is advertised next to the 18th-century Rose and Crown (left).
The restoration was directed at putting the house into a representation of what it might have looked like in 1564. The garden was planted out with trees and flowers mentioned in the Bard's works.
This stately home stands at the higher end of the village of More Crichel. An older building burnt down in 1742; the house we see here was erected soon afterwards by the Napier family.
The last remaining windpump in Cambridgeshire was taken from nearby Adventurer's Fen and resited at Wicken Fen in 1956.
The Wet Dock was constructed between 1839 and 1842, and at the time it was the most revolutionary and the biggest of its kind in the country.
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