Places
10 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,534 photos found. Showing results 1,661 to 1,680.
Maps
71 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
8,173 memories found. Showing results 831 to 840.
Foxleys Jewellers
This is my grandad's and his family's old shop. They don't own it any longer but the shop and name still remain the same and there was a chain of them and think there still is.
A memory of Rugby
Sainsburys And Hudsons
I also remember going into Sainsburys as a child in the 1960s when it was halfway up the High Street on the left, it had metal racks on the front of the counters to rest shopping bags on. The marble effect floors were a ...Read more
A memory of Ashford in 1974 by
Stockdales Greengrocers Shop
Stockdales shop was owned by by grandma Winnie Stockdale and her husband Jim. She retired from the shop in 1965 and lived at Church Street, Cudworth. She opened the shop in about 1937. My grandad Jim worked at Monk ...Read more
A memory of Cudworth in 1956 by
Auntie June Cother
Auntie June, my dad's sister, turned 90 July 2, 2010. We had a wonderful party for her, at the Red Cross hall. The food was prepared by a group of ladies who certainly know how to put on a great spread. Auntie enjoyed her day. ...Read more
A memory of Wincanton in 2010 by
Hawthorn Box Fields
Pat - it's lovely to read about Hawthorn as my grandmother Mrs Berrett and my Uncle Peter and Aunt Hilda Evans also lived there. School holidays were spent picking blackberries at the old D.P camp and playing in the ...Read more
A memory of Hawthorn in 1955 by
Straining The Memory
I attended primary school at Horstead Keynes briefly until it changed location a few miles away. (I went there as well but can't for the life of me recall the name of the place.) The head mistress was the tall and ...Read more
A memory of Horsted Keynes in 1953 by
Shackerley
My mum and Dad moved to Shackerley just as I started secondary school, which I think it was 1972. I attended Tyldesley Boys County Secondary School. We lived in a bungalow on Hertford Drive, they couldn't build a house opposite ...Read more
A memory of Tyldesley in 1972 by
Luther Paxton Plumber
The building jutting out into Castle Hill on the left upper of this picture is no. 17 and was my Great Uncle Luther Paxton's plumbers shop. The shop was on the ground floor and he and his wife, Amy lived on the upper two ...Read more
A memory of Richmond in 1948 by
Carrog Memory, As A Ww2 Evacuee.
I first visited Carrog in 1939 as an evacuee, at the start of World War 2. I was accompanied by my two sisters, having travelled by train from Birkenhead on the Wirral. All the evacuees were escorted to the Church ...Read more
A memory of Carrog in 1940 by
A Childhood Reminiscence
I lived in Edgware from 1941 and, although a young child, I remember the war years vividly, especially collecting shrapnel and the sounds of bombs, anti-aircraft guns and V2 rockets. In 1944 I began school at Edgware ...Read more
A memory of Edgware in 1940 by
Captions
3,478 captions found. Showing results 1,993 to 2,016.
Austin's Library is now the Sue Ryder charity shop, Allsworth's ironmonger's, owned by Harry Hole, and immediately beyond, the Edwardian world of Martin & Triggs, Outfitters.
In his later life he successfully farmed and grew fruit on his land, and during the Second World War sold his produce from his own shop.
Although the window might be Spartan, no shortage of signs advertise the shop's presence.
By 1903 the George and Dragon (of the Commercial Hotel sign) looks directly across the road at its rival, the now relocated Dunlop Temperance Hotel (above the Fry's Pure Cocoa signed shop window).
On the right is the Goudhurst Coffee House, and it looks as if a shop is next door. Eedes the chemist sits behind the trees (centre).
In return for granting permission to the GWR to build the line across his land, local landowner George Frederick Muntz demanded the provision of a station: houses and shops inevitably followed.
In its time it has been a farm, a carrier's business and an antique shop. It was first called Chester House in 1881.
All were demolished in 1998 to make way for the Touchwood Centre, a shopping and leisure complex which opened in 2001.
These shops were built in the 1920s, and look much the same today.
The shop on that corner was one of the most well-known in all Fylde: Richards the ironmonger's stocked everything that a farmer might need, plus a wide range of domestic articles.
Next door to Gillhams' gifts and stationery shop (left) is the Cadena Cafe with its first-floor oriel window, which opened at the turn of the 20th century.
Here, a horse-cart loaded with barrels and bales makes a delivery to an ironmonger's shop, whilst a boy leans against a hand-cart.
The town's main commercial institutions and shops occupied many of the elegant three-storey buildings along Fishergate.
The building on the corner houses two large shops, a 'high class' grocer's and, next door, a confectioner's. Opposite is the post office, with a pillar box outside.
There are varied shops, good pubs and a fine church housing old paintings of the Hobart family and of the builder who constructed the church in 1496.
The narrow High Street, with its branch of the National Provincial Bank (later to become the National Westminster Bank) on the right, and the local Post Office, shoe-shop, and newsagents on the left, was
Village shop and parish church form the heart of this cliff-top village. Walls and houses are built of whole flints.
Beyond is the quirky 1830s St Nicholas's parish church, now with the very modern Podium Shopping centre to its right.
Historian Arthur Mee described Botley as 'a delightful old town with quaint shops, handsome houses, and pretty inns'.
Started in 1810, it has now been converted into Stamford Walk shopping mall.
On the left, in the open site, are now 1970s shops and a large Co-op supermarket.
For about 200 years its main industry was rope making, which was started by Thomas Burfield; his shop was in the High Street.
The Post Office (left) also advertises Bronte books and postcards, while the Bronte Guest House is visible behind the antiques shop (right centre).
Today, the delightful mixture of medieval half-timbered and Georgian houses are mostly craft and antique shops, catering for the tourist.
Places (10)
Photos (2534)
Memories (8173)
Books (0)
Maps (71)