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

Maps

884 maps found.

1903, Milton Ref. RNC781130
1919, Milton Ref. POP781137
1919, Milton Ref. POP781142
1919, Milton Ref. POP781145
1920, Milton Ref. POP781147
1947, Milton Ref. NPO781133
1946, Milton Ref. NPO781134
1946, Milton Ref. NPO781137
1945, Milton Ref. NPO781144
1945, Milton Ref. NPO781146
1896, Milton Ref. RNE781130
1897, Milton Ref. RNE781131
1895, Milton Ref. RNE781132
1899, Milton Ref. RNE781133
1896, Milton Ref. RNE781136
1898, Milton Ref. RNE781141
1910, Milton Ref. RNC781098
1905, Milton Ref. RNC781124
1925, Milton Ref. POP781128
1925, Milton Ref. POP781129

Books

Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.

Memories

160 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.

Growing Up In Filton

I was born in Plymouth of Welsh parents, there was no work in Newport Wales when my Father got out of the Navy, so, we moved to my Grandparents house in 50 Wallscourt Rd Filton, until our house 13 Canberra Grove Filton became ...Read more

A memory of Filton in 1966 by Christine Flage

Porters Lodge Doune

I have been researching my great-grandfather. I found out that he was born at The Porters Lodge, Doune in 1848. His name was John Bilton and his father, Thomas Bilton, was a gamekeeper on the Doune Estate. My great-grandfather ...Read more

A memory of Doune in 1860 by Rosemary Mansfield

Bristol Blitz

The High Street - the scene of many stirring events in Bristol's history and the heart of the city - was destroyed and lost forever during the Second World War. As a city with docks and industry at its heart, Bristol was a natural ...Read more

A memory of Bristol by Paul Townsend

East Ham Memories

I was born in Plashet Grove in 1951 but shortly moved to 146 Milton Avenue until moving away from the area in 1967. So many memories. Happy days playing in Plashet Park, 30 a side football in Milton Avenue with a case football ...Read more

A memory of East Ham in 1951 by Peter Hopkins

1960's Memories

I was born in Perivale Maternity hospital in 1961 and lived at 194 Bilton Road until 1980, when I got married in St. Nicholas Church Wadsworth Road and moved to 97 Bilton Road. I remember getting my pocket money every Saturday and ...Read more

A memory of Perivale by Angie Carmichael

Perivale, 1964 1994

I was born at 194 Bilton Road in June 1964 and my name was Jackie Wall. I attended Perivale Nursery School, then the infant school and followed by the middle school. I was terrified of the headmistress Mrs Charlton, but ...Read more

A memory of Perivale by Jackie Gindrat

Driving Out Of Bristol

Centre of road, driving towards the camera in his brand new ivory Ford Consul Mk II reg. 441 AAE is my recently deceased father, Captain G.G.Liles of BOAC (ex-RAF).1920-2006. We lived in Brislington from 1949-1958, until ...Read more

A memory of Bristol in 1957 by John Liles

Ex St Roberts Catholic School Harrogate

Born in Waterloo Street, Harrogate, in early 1940s. Attended above school until left in 1956. Started work at J.S.Driver, grocers on Beulah Street, Stan Wood manager. Remember 'Syncopated Sandy,' playing ...Read more

A memory of Harrogate by Tony Richardson

Great Haseley

I was five when I moved to Great Haseley from Newington, near Stadhampton, with my mother, father and brother. The year was 1957 and Horse Close Cottages was a new housing estate - we were thrilled to have a bathroom and an ...Read more

A memory of Great Haseley by Linda Twibill (Nee Ring)

Martins News Agents Bilton Road 1965

Wow, I was looking at the pictures of Bilton Road, and it's good to see the newsagents, Martin's is still there. The Maternity Hospital, I can confirm was on Stockdove Way at the junction of Perivale Lane and Argyle Road, I still remember seeing the signs for it.

A memory of Perivale by Martin Lecky

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Captions

35 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.

Caption For Milton Malsor, Post Office C1960

Milton Malsor is a charming, typically English village to the south of Northampton and the M1. This picture shows the village post office, delightfully housed in a picturesque thatched cottage.

Caption For Saltburn By The Sea, Milton Street 1913

Milton Street forms one of the main commercial areas of Saltburn, and is characterised by some fascinating glazed canopies across the shop fronts that survive to this day.

Caption For Milton Keynes, The M1 At Junction 14 C1965

Construction of the M1's first 55 miles (including Milton Keynes's section) took 586 days - a bridge every three days and a mile of road every ten.

Caption For New Milton, Thatched Cottage C1965

The cliffs south of Milton are renowned for the profusion of fossils to be found. Examples can be seen in local museums and at the Natural History Museum in London.

Caption For Milton Keynes, Caldecotte Lake 2005

MILTON KEYNES'S first known resident once swam around in the area now known as Caldecotte Lake.

Caption For New Milton, Old Milton Church C1965

Milton's church tower is nearly four hundred years old, though the rest of the building is more recent.

Caption For Milton Keynes, The Pennyland Boat Basin 2005

She led an army of charioteers to sack Colchester, London and St Albans before heading north through Milton Keynes city area along the high streets of Fenny and Stony Stratford.

Caption For Milton Abbas, The Village C1965

When the first Earl of Dorchester purchased Milton Abbey in 1752, he had the entire village dismantled and rebuilt further away from his new home.

Caption For Cambridge, Trinity College Library 1890

The library houses many famous manuscripts, including ones by Milton, Macaulay, Thackeray and Tennyson.

Caption For Milton Abbas, The Village C1965

When the first Earl of Dorchester purchased Milton Abbey in 1752, he had the entire village dismantled, moving it further away from his new home.

Caption For Nottingham, Clumber Street C1950

In the background is the Milton's Head Hotel, a Victorian public house which seemed to be a fixture until the construction of the Victoria Shopping Centre.

Caption For Hilton, The Village C1955

Two miles south of Bulbarrow, one of Dorset's highest summits, Hilton and neighbouring Milton Abbas share some of the most beautiful countryside in the county.

Caption For Ascott Under Wychwood, The Village C1950

Wychwood is an ancient deciduous forest in the North Cotswolds, and a string of picturesque villages take their names from it: Milton-under-Wychwood, Shipton-under-Wychwood and, glimpsed here as it was

Caption For Cambridge, Trinity College Library 1890

The library houses many famous manuscripts, including ones by Milton, Macaulay, Thackeray and Tennyson.

Caption For Hilton, The Village C1955

Two miles south of Bulbarrow, one of Dorset's highest summits, Hilton and neighbouring Milton Abbas share some of the most beautiful countryside in the county.

Caption For Milton Keynes, Woughton On The Green 2005

Perhaps the most significant bequest the Anglo-Saxons left for future citizens of Milton Keynes was their seat of local government, one of the earliest in England.

Caption For Milton Abbas, The Village C1965

When the first Earl of Dorchester purchased Milton Abbey in 1752, he had the entire village dismantled, moving it further away from his new home.

Caption For Milton Regis, High Street C1955

Before becoming engulfed in the sprawl of Sittingbourne, Milton was a royal manor in its own right.

Caption For Cambridge, Petty Cury 1931

Opposite the east end of Petty Cury is the entrance to Christ College, beyond which are the gardens and mulberry tree under which Milton is said to have written Lycidas.

Caption For Cambridge, Petty Cury 1931

Opposite the east end of Petty Cury is the entrance to Christ College, beyond which are the gardens and mulberry tree under which Milton is said to have written 'Lycidas'.

Caption For Milton Malsor, The Church C1955

Beyond Blisworth and virtually within earshot of the M1 (which opened in the late 1950s) Milton Malsor survives proximity to Northampton remarkably well.

Caption For Gravesend, The Roman Catholic Church 1902

Originally built as an Anglican church in Milton Road in 1834, and then purchased for the Catholic community in 1851, St John the Evangelist had its unusual and prominent tower, with a French-style saddleback

Caption For Cambridge, Christ's College 1908

In the college gardens stands a mulberry tree under which Milton is said to have written Lycidas.

Caption For Cambridge, Christ's College 1908

In the college gardens stands a mulberry tree under which Milton is said to have written 'Lycidas'.