Places
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Photos
3 photos found. Showing results 1 to 3.
Maps
30 maps found.
Books
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Memories
170 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Where We'd Spend Our Tuck Money
As a child aged 7 in 1955, I used to holiday with the Shaftesbury Society at a camp, just round the corner. The camp had several dormitories, each accommodating about 10 children. The fortnight I'd be there would ...Read more
A memory of Seasalter by
The Leeds And Sunderland Cup Final
I watched so many cup finals on black and white television when I was a boy never dreaming of the day that I might actually be there. But it happened in 1973! Would you believe my neighbour was a long retired ...Read more
A memory of Wembley in 1973 by
60 Years On And I Still Love It!
My Auntie May Howard and her husband Frank, from St. Helens, had a wooden holiday bungalow she called Homestead in Dee Avenue Talacre - it was definitely 1961 onwards and possibly just before that and the community ...Read more
A memory of Talacre by
Little Green/The Old Forge
I visited the house with my 2nd cousins as their mother, Ethel Smith, and my grandmother, Rosa Matilda Smith, lived in the house with their family for many, many years until the last of the Smiths living in the house died, ...Read more
A memory of Mells in 1972 by
Hartford Secondary Modern School
Me and my late twin brother started at this school in 1953, the school was mixed. We were the first ones to be there, it was a brand new school. Fred Beech was the headmaster, he was a grand man and would always ...Read more
A memory of Northwich in 1953 by
Swimming Above Stepping Stones Weir At Bothal
Our Mam being an Ashington lassie, we returned to her birthplace when Mam divorced my father who she met before the Second World War - that was when Mam was in London and working in 'service'. We were ...Read more
A memory of Bothal in 1949 by
Connemara
My grandmother (name of McDonagh, nee Faherty) lived in a place I believe is called 'Ryn' (not sure of the spelling) in Connemara. She had a beautiful cottage a short walk from the sea. I would like to be able to take my husband to ...Read more
A memory of Connemara in 1975 by
Old Southall Remembered
I lived in old Southall (Norwood Road - Norwood Green end) during the 1960s to the 1990s and have seen great changes. I went to school at Clifton Road, and the school had a great Headmaster, Mr Hancock, for a while. One ...Read more
A memory of Southall
Royal National Hospital Ventnor
I worked as a nurse at the hospital from 1955 to 1956 and went back for the first time in June of this year. It was really nostalgic to be there again, even though the hospital has long gone the Botanic Gardens are ...Read more
A memory of Ventnor in 1956 by
Barking Road, C1965
The photograph on Barking Road c1965 brought back some childhood memories. I was born in Dukes Court in 1955. I can remember the shops in the photo, the Fish & Chip shop, Johns the Greengrocer's, Walkers, Aflecks, the Dry ...Read more
A memory of East Ham in 1965 by
Captions
11 captions found. Showing results 1 to 11.
At the corner of Bethel Drive is the beach-flint Sailor's and Fisherman's Bethel (left), still functioning as a place of worship.
In the background Bethel Baptist Church can be seen.
To increase the trade of the local estate, Charlotte Bethell, the wife of the lord of the manor, financed this three-mile long canal, which opened in 1802. 90-ton keelboats brought coal to Leven and returned
On the closure of Bethel Presbyterian Church in Court Road, the churches amalgamated, and Trinity was renamed Holy Trinity.
On the Bethel Church of 1803 (centre) is this positive message: 'Come sinners for the gospel fear.
It was from the window on the gable on the left, above the Angel's coaching arch, that magistrate Bethell Cox read the Riot Act to the mob of agricultural workers in November 1830, and was
The gates of Barry Lawn Tennis Club are to the right, and on the junction of Harbour Road and St Nicholas Road stands Bethel Baptist Church.
The name of the village comes from an Old English personal name, Aethel, meaning 'a noble friend'.
The cart may well be there to collect sand.
This homogenisation of society means that the area has lost the variety of human inter- reaction that used to be there.
This homogenisation of society means that the area has lost the variety of human inter- reaction that used to be there.
Places (4)
Photos (3)
Memories (170)
Books (0)
Maps (30)