Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- West End, Gwynedd
- West End, Hampshire (near Southampton)
- West End, Surrey (near Camberley)
- West End, Hampshire (near Medstead)
- West End, Leicestershire
- Ward End, West Midlands
- Shard End, West Midlands
- West End, Gloucestershire
- West End, Dorset
- West End, Strathclyde
- West End, Mid Glamorgan
- West End, Gwent
- West End, Hertfordshire
- West End, Suffolk
- West End, Sussex
- West End, Lancashire (near Morecambe)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Tadcaster)
- West End, Avon (near Nailsea)
- West End, Somerset (near Wells)
- West End, Oxfordshire (near Wallingford)
- West End, Berkshire (near Wokingham)
- West End, Norfolk (near Great Yarmouth)
- West End, Bedfordshire (near Great Staughton)
- West End, Kent (near Sittingbourne)
- West End, Yorkshire (near South Cave)
- West End, Avon (near Yate)
- West End, Wiltshire (near Shaftesbury)
- West End, Wiltshire (near Bowerchalke)
- West End, Berkshire (near Bracknell)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Driffield)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Hedon)
- West End, Lincolnshire (near Boston)
- West End, Cumbria (near Carlisle)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Cleckheaton)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Horsforth)
- West End, Oxfordshire (near Hardwick)
Photos
279 photos found. Showing results 1,621 to 279.
Maps
1,651 maps found.
Books
19 books found. Showing results 1,945 to 19.
Memories
2,057 memories found. Showing results 811 to 820.
Yeadon Old Prize Band
My brother Arthur 2 years my junior and my father Ernest Carter (dec'd 1963)all played for many years with Yeadon old prize band. We practiced 2 times a week in the old British Legion hut up behind the Yeadon town hall. ...Read more
A memory of Yeadon in 1950 by
Visitation Convent Boarding School, Bridport
During the 1940s, I lived in Weymouth, but from May 1942, when I was 5, until July 1947, I was a boarder at the school. I was happy there, and still remember the names of my teachers - Sister Anne, ...Read more
A memory of Bridport in 1940 by
Redhill 1970s
I was brought up in Redhill from 1969 to 1983. Was known as Kay Trevillion then. Redhill has changed so much since those days, what a shame!!! I now live in West Sussex. Left Redhill area when I was about 15, but still attended ...Read more
A memory of Redhill by
Happy Holidays
Spent many, many years visiting grandparents in Caste Craig then in West Mains with my parents John and Pam Watson. My father John was the only child of Hugh and Maggie Watson, whom we went to visit each year. We spent time ...Read more
A memory of Blyth Bridge in 1955 by
Growing Up In 1950s Wheatley
I can remember my early childhood days. We lived in The Avenue. All the fields at the back of us were open fields. It is all houses of course these days.(Elton Crescent, Miller Road etc). Early school days were ...Read more
A memory of Wheatley by
Happy Days
I grew up in West Ham from my birth until 1960, living at Stephens Road, Stratford. I remember going shopping with Mum to Stratford High Road, we would go to the market for all Mum's shopping. We would buy fish from Angel Lane and ...Read more
A memory of West Ham in 1958 by
Visit To Helmsdale
My husband and I were at a wedding in Dornock and took a trip to Helmsdale. Unknown to me at the time my great grandfather came from Loth, West Helmsdale. His name was Adam Mckenzie, the son of Alexander Mckenzie and Janet ...Read more
A memory of Helmsdale by
Dear Dear Old Kingsbury
Oh so many memories! Where does one start? Looking at this photo I remember the milk dispensing machine outside the Express Dairy shop. I think it was 6d you'd put in, and after a lot of rumbling, out would come a small ...Read more
A memory of Kingsbury in 1958 by
Three Kings Piece
I don't know why we called it Three King's Piece but in the mid 50's to the early 60's when I was growing up, that was what we called it. I lived in the flats in Armfield Crescent and when we went to Three Kings Piece we went the ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham in 1958 by
Captions
1,993 captions found. Showing results 1,945 to 1,968.
It was extensively modified and augmented between 1835-46 by Sir Charles Barry, at the behest of W J Bankes, the friend of Lord Byron, who had amassed a superb collection of paintings and
Many camped on site, and have fond memories of halcyon days spent in the bright summer air. These workers seem so neatly dressed that they have surely put on their best clothes for the photographer!
Among them were the Nightingalls of South Hatch in Burgh Heath Road, another father-and-son team; Tom Walls the actor, who won the 1932 Derby with his April the Fifth; and George and Bessie Duller
The textile mills, forges and foundries, and the vast array of factories of all kinds that sprang up in the 1830s, attracted many people from the surrounding countryside, who exchanged the traditional
In 1824 the Royal Manchester Institution was hoping to move into a new headquarters in Mosley Street, and in the accepted practice of the day invited architects to submit their ideas by means of open competition
In the terms of his will, however, he left instructions that his estate - which now consisted of Moulsham and Chelmsford - should remain in one piece as it passed to his successive male heirs.
The castle began its life as a far humbler structure than we enjoy today, once described as "... a slender fortress of stakes and earth".
The department store Shirer & Lance's was founded in the 1830s, and occupied most of the Colonnade. It ceased trading in 1979, but it is remembered by many.
In front of the church is the County Museum; nearer the camera, behind the 'No Waiting' sign, is one of Aylesbury's best town houses, with arched sash windows to the ground floor.
The royal apartments were situated on the west side of the quadrangle. It was here that Queen Margaret kept vigil whilst James IV fought at Flodden. James was between a rock and a hard place.
The buildings round the green date from the 18th to 19th centuries, with the exception of the 17th- century barn with a hipped and thatched roof to the right of the church.
We can just see the second Hunsdon public house, the Fox and Hounds, in the distance on the left, with houses in Tanner's Way (on the opposite side of the road) behind.
Although Church Street has had much rebuilding in recent years it still retains its character and is one of the best streets in the old town.
The street names survive to this day, but only a tiny section remains of the walls themselves, moved and repositioned near the former East Gate.
of accommodation, eating haute cuisine food and drinking the very finest of wines.
Wilfrid is a northern dedication, and usually denotes an ancient church. Ribchester was once a Roman fort (Bremetennacum), and it was situated by an important ford of the River Ribble.
Later public buildings included the employment exchange in West Street, built in 1939 in place of rented accommodation, and later the tax office in Norfolk Street, with hutments out in the back
With business looking good, and the founder long gone from Vauxhall's, the company sought room to expand and happened upon Luton, where the council welcomed them with open arms.
Bold Street was for many years an elegant and elite shopping area. Here, taste and refinement were more important than price. We can also see St Luke's Church at the top of the street.
In the 1950s Kettering was still an important boot and shoe town, specialising in heavy work boots. It also had a significant engineering and clothing industry.
Here is a wonderfully atmospheric shot, typical of the best of late 19th-century photography, illustrating the beautiful view from which Belvoir derives its name.
It is conceivable that, following the Grammar School's hasty exit from the old refectory, it had been patched up and gentrified until, by the 18th century, it had mutated into one of the town's
The boys, both day pupils and boarders, worshipped in the Roman Catholic Church in Victoria Grove. The nuns would not allow boys to use their names and instead gave each a number.
Before the foot and mouth outbreak of 2001, it hosted fat and store cattle sales on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays. Since the outbreak it now only sells on Wednesdays.
Places (99)
Photos (279)
Memories (2057)
Books (19)
Maps (1651)