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Maps
7,034 maps found.
Books
163 books found. Showing results 2,209 to 2,232.
Memories
22,899 memories found. Showing results 921 to 930.
Highgate Village In The 1960s
What I am most interested in writing about is how Highgate Village has changed so much since my school days, growing up there in the 1960s. Today most of the shops are coffee shops, ...Read more
A memory of Highgate in 1965 by
Coronation Year
I moved to Holme on Spalding Moor, just after Easter 1953. My gran had a pub in Hull called The Black Boy, and she retired to Holme to run the Railway Inn in Holme and as I then lived with her I moved too. I was very ...Read more
A memory of Holme by
The Cedars Childrens Home Barnsley Rd Hemsworth
I resided as a child at The Cedars for 14 years. I would like to know the history together with details of other children that were there from 1953 to 1964.
A memory of Hemsworth in 1955 by
The Amazing Vaughan Family
Stan and Helen Vaughan met me at the Leicester Train station after my long journey from California. I had won a Rotary International Scholarship and the Vaughans were my host family. I was a scared young girl and I ...Read more
A memory of Desford in 1986 by
1948 To 1965
My name is Margaret Saunders. I was born at 3 Theobald Street, but at sometime we moved to 18a Theobald Street. I went to Furzehill Infant and Junior schools, then on to Lyndhurst. We lived over the shop that was the stationers, ...Read more
A memory of Borehamwood in 1948 by
My Childhood In Erith
My sister Wendy and I went to school at The Sacred Heart Convent on Erith Rd in the early '50s. I remember being taught by nuns in traditional nun's habits. But one teacher who wasn't a nun I remember because she was called ...Read more
A memory of Erith in 1954 by
Naburn Hall
My memories of Naburn Hall are of when my mother, twin brother and younger sister used to spend our summer holidays with my great aunt, Miss Edith Pawson, in Fulfold. Aunt Edie was the housekeeper for Commander Palmer at the time and we ...Read more
A memory of Naburn in 1946 by
Little Boys Home, South Darenth
My two great uncles were at Horton Kirby Home in 1880's, aged 6 and 10. The 6 year old died of pneumonia there, and the 10 year old went into the army when he was of age. He eventually emigrated to Canada.
A memory of South Darenth in 1880 by
Mr. Stevens
Does anyone remember Mr. Stevens? He used to keep the village tidy; always sweeping the roadside. He had a daughter Betty who I would love to know of her whereabouts as she was a friend of mine when we went to Perins school ...Read more
A memory of Cheriton in 1955 by
Does Anyone Know Eddie
Hi I used to go to Easington Technical college at Peterlee between 1967-1969 doing a secretarial course for two years. During this time the mining lads used to come along and there was a guy from Witton Gilbert called ...Read more
A memory of Langley Park in 1969
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 2,209 to 2,232.
The character of Antrim's coast is nowhere better expressed than where it is possible to see the black basalt overlying the white chalk rocks, as here at the Wishing Arch.
Georgian buildings abound in the town, although it harks back to Tudor times, owing much of its early development to Thomas Seckford, a lawyer at the court of Elizabeth I.
This photograph captures the Edwardian gaiety of the Thames at Boulters Lock, a particularly fashionable spot; here dozens of smart cruisers, punts and small craft parade before an admiring audience.
This hilltop village, at the head of the Coombe Valley, sits astride the main road between Bude and Barnstaple. It was once the Pilgrim's route to St Michael's Mount.
This photograph was taken along Roman Bank - which is not Roman at all – and the scene is totally different today.
The Village 1901 This tiny, attractive hamlet close to the great manor house of Ightham Mote has one small shop, the Plough Inn selling beers brewed at Westerham near the county border, and
At that time, Exe Bridge was all that was needed to deal with Exeter's traffic. Today, a parallel bridge has been built, creating an enormous roundabout.
At this stage only the nave had been completed in its austere early English Gothic style.
The elegant Victorian life boat house with its round tower and conical roof, quite new at this time, has now gone, and a modern concrete life boat station replaces it further south-east, painted an attractive
Campers drift back to their caravans after watching one of Poole Harbour's famous sunsets.
Newton Abbot and Newton Bushel were two discrete settlements at the head of the Teign estuary when William of Orange arrived there from Brixham in 1688, on his way to displace James II as King of England
This picture of the square at the south end of Dublin Street, is interesting in that it shows the original market cross, which was repositioned here when the Rossmore Memorial was erected in the Diamond
The mock timbered gables of Red House at Darley Dale are now home to a horse and coaching museum, which runs coach-and-fours through the grounds of nearby Chatsworth House for visitors during
Askrigg station is on the North Eastern Railway route between Northallerton and a conection with the Midland Railway at Hawes.
We go along the Frimley Green Road, and arrive at Frimley Green, with Wharf Road to the left of the picture. The shop and the house next door have been replaced by a modern parade of shops.
The shop of J Singleton, where you could shop and also acquire a haircut, is no longer a general-purpose shop.
The Normans transformed the Benedictine abbey into one of England's greatest Christian establishments, the abbey building being larger than Worcester Cathedral.
The village is situated at one end of the beautifully named Golden Valley.
St Peter's church was built in the 1830s to replace the old church at Hamsey, which was isolated on a former island in the Ouse meadows.
Here a little Victorian girl poses among the rowing boats laid up on the beach at Arnside.
Fishing boats lie at their moorings on the left, while a small cargo carrier lies moored just off the beach. Horses and carts were still the best way of loading and off-loading in a tidal harbour.
The church of St Mary the Virgin at Upper Swainswick dates from Norman times.
Barely 12 years old at this time, and still looking pristine, this mock-Tudor hotel was rebuilt and reworked by Herbert Green.
The fine, large town church is situated up an alley at the east end of Market Street and behind the market-place. Only remnants of its medieval tower survive.
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