Places
5 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
9,649 photos found. Showing results 1,501 to 1,520.
Maps
18 maps found.
Books
13 books found. Showing results 1,801 to 13.
Memories
4,612 memories found. Showing results 751 to 760.
Just Down The Road From Us
Our family lived in the village of West Horsley all of my life, I was born in 51, my sister in 49 and my youngest sister 56. We used to bike down to Ripley and Ockham. I went to school at Sir Walter Raleigh, and Howard ...Read more
A memory of Ripley in 1960 by
Family History
I am researching my family history and HANNAH WILKINSON was born at TUNSTALL in the early 1800s. Does anyone know of any information regarding the family and where in the village they lived. Regards Pam
A memory of Tunstall by
Holidays
We spent many a happy holiday in the Bridgwater area, sometimes staying on a farm just outside Bridgwater and in later years in a flat in the holiday village in nearby Burnham on Sea. Many wonderful memories of my dead parents and dogs!
A memory of Bridgwater by
Farm At White Hill
My father Jenkin Evans and mother Valerie Evans lived at Potters Cross Farm, White Hill, Kinver from just before the Second World War. This is the farmhouse which you can see which still exists to this day. They raised four ...Read more
A memory of Kinver by
Felsted, My Village
I was born & bred in Felsted, living in the area until 1965 when I emigrated to New Zealand. These photographs of Felsted Mill remind me of the many hours spent on the wall below the water wheel race, fishing for roach and ...Read more
A memory of Felsted by
Happy Days
I have many fond memories of Bodiam and the Castle, from when I was 1 year old in 1943, until I was 15. Along with dear Mum and my two sisters, our whole extended family on my mum's side consisting of several families would move to ...Read more
A memory of Bodiam in 1950 by
Stonehurst Five Ashes
We lived at Stone Cottage, and then Stonehurst on the road between Five Ashes and Jarvis Brook for 7 years whilst I was a child. Wonderful freedom absorbing the Wealden countryside. We used the grocers shop, run by Mr ...Read more
A memory of Five Ashes in 1959 by
My Fading Memories
I was but a lad of 8 when my folks bundled us all off to a wide land downunder. Since 1968, Australia has been my home. I often speak of my fading memories of Queensbury, my walks through the village, living on 'The ...Read more
A memory of Queensbury in 1968 by
Wickham Bishops Born And Bred
In 1950 I was born on a cold winter's night to my mother Rosemary Jesse, at 'The Black Houses', Kelvedon Road, Wickham Bishops, built by architect, designer and socio-economic theorist Arthur Heygate Macmurdo. ...Read more
A memory of Wickham Bishops by
Blacksmith's Yard
My paternal grandmother Annie Cowell came from Stanford and I have always been led to believe that the space on the left of the house in the foreground, where the trees are, was the site of her father's blacksmith's ...Read more
A memory of Stanford-le-Hope in 1940 by
Captions
5,016 captions found. Showing results 1,801 to 1,824.
Beside this part of the village green we see a grocer and newsagent's shop by the signpost pointing to Carnforth in one direction, Longridge in the other.
The stream ran down from Pen Hill through this pond to provide motive power for the corn mill over the road and below the Heifer Inn.
Not far from the imposing Buckden Pike, here is a picture of tranquillity in the upper section of Wharfedale.
Mitton means 'the village where the streams meet'. The Hodder and the Ribble meet here, and that is what gave the area its name.
In the days when the village had two MPs (before the Reform Act of 1832), election day was something to behold.
The village's name was originally spelt Cranley.
Five miles east of Sleaford, Heckington is a village widely known for its superb 14th-century Decorated Gothic parish church with its 185 foot high spire, rich carvings and sinuous window tracery.
This former slate-mining village lies below Cadair Idris, cupped in the Dysynni valley between Tal y Llyn and Tywyn.
This view on the Stainby Road, with the houses on the left fronting onto the High Street, which runs left from the signpost, hardly does justice to this large and attractive village in whose part-Norman
This is a pretty church in a small village to the north east of Melton Mowbray, on what was once a route through to Sproxton.
This charming lane near the church has a concentration of thatched cottages. Further along is Jubilee Barn, the original tithe barn of the village.
The River Meon rises only a mile to the south of this village and flows prettily through the High Street.
This scene of the parish church of St Peter at Addingham, standing in its walled churchyard on the village green and reached by a stone bridge over the beck, has not changed substantially since this photograph
Castle Hill is next to Coopers Hill, and is best accessed from the Abbotswood estate in Brockworth, or from a footpath off the A46.
Here we see the River Itchen flowing through Bishopstoke. In 1838, the writer Robert Maudie observed: 'church and the village are beautifully situated, the former close by the bank of the river'.
Here we see a fine display of weatherboarding along the empty and dusty main street. The faded pub sign is for the Bull Inn.
Note the basket of shrimps, the hats and scarves of their traditional dress and the larger basket one lady has on her back.
Staithes was a fishing port of some standing, landing sufficient cod, mackerel and haddock for the North Eastern Railway to run three or four special fish trains a week.
Arguably more appropriately termed a mansion, the 'new' St Fagans Castle stands atop its impressive terraced gardens.
Geddington, by-passed by the A43, is a delightful stone-cottaged backwater. Here the photographer looks south-east towards the church of St Mary Magdalene.
The large white building is the Hean Castle Hotel, previously the Picton Castle Hotel, and still a popular hostelry in the village. George Borrow, author of Wild Wales, stayed here in 1857.
Tideford is at the very head of the tidal creek of the River Tiddy; this lane leads down to the water, with the woodlands of the St Germans estate on the far side.
Seen here from the south, across the bank of the small stream which flows through the village, the pale sandstone outline of St George's Church stands proudly in its churchyard.
The Co-operative is now the Silo Central, an internet café. There is another café just outside the village, at Derwen College.
Places (5)
Photos (9649)
Memories (4612)
Books (13)
Maps (18)