Places
32 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire
- Stowe School, Buckinghamshire
- Willingham by Stow, Lincolnshire
- Stow Bridge, Norfolk
- West Stow, Suffolk
- Stow, Lincolnshire
- Stowe, Staffordshire
- Stowe, Lincolnshire
- Stowe, Gloucestershire
- Stowe, Hereford & Worcester
- Stowe, Shropshire
- Stow, Borders
- Church Stowe, Northamptonshire
- Hoffleet Stow, Lincolnshire
- Stow Park, Gwent
- Stow Bardolph, Norfolk
- Stowe Green, Gloucestershire
- Stow Longa, Cambridgeshire
- Upper Stowe, Northamptonshire
- Nether Stowe, Staffordshire
- Shepeau Stow, Lincolnshire
- Stow Bedon, Norfolk
- Stow Maries, Essex
- Stow cum Quy, Cambridgeshire
- Stow Lawn, West Midlands
- Lower Stow Bedon, Norfolk
- Normanby by Stow, Lincolnshire
- Stowe-by-Chartley, Staffordshire
- Sturton by Stow, Lincolnshire
- Idbury, Oxfordshire (near Stow-on-the-Wold)
- Broadwell, Gloucestershire (near Stow-on-the-Wold)
- Donnington, Gloucestershire (near Stow-on-the-Wold)
Photos
170 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
173 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
76 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Boyhood Memories
My aunt Jessie (King) lived in the house on the left of the picture from around 1920 to 1954. In 1954 she moved out and my uncle Sidney (Edwards) ( her brother) moved into the house and turned it into a little tea room come ...Read more
A memory of East Bergholt in 1946 by
Bristol's Cabot's Tower
Bristol's Cabot's Tower, and the penny pinching Council. Bristol's most prominent land mark, the Cabot Tower, was 100 years old in 1998. But the official opening was marked by a disastrous fire, a confidence trick and ...Read more
A memory of Bristol in 1890 by
Bradley, Bilston And Stowlawn
I managed to enter the world in Lord Street, West Bradley, 1944. I attended St Martins and earliest I can remember lived in a prefab in Moxley (Castleview Road). After St Martins I attended Stonefield school. Moved to ...Read more
A memory of Tipton by
Happy Days
Oh the memories stored away!! Charlie's opposite Cove Green, going there for sweeties on a Sunday, Cove Green (not as good as Tower Hill swings though!), Mundays closing at 1pm on Sundays, Thorntons with its yellow facade, and wool etc, I ...Read more
A memory of Cove in 1965 by
Memories Of War Years 1939 45 Newport
Memories of War years 1939 -1945. By John Beal. Little did I realise that I would be involved in the army when war broke out in 1939. I was attending Hatherleigh Central School in Newport at the time and as ...Read more
A memory of Newport in 1940 by
Guernsey Evacuees
My mother and her family, the Petits, were evacuees from Guernsey during World War 2. They were housed in Coates by Stow and then Saxilby. They attended Stow School. There were 8 children, Cyril, Donald,Olive, Mavis, Monica, ...Read more
A memory of Saxilby in 1940 by
Hixon Village
I was 6 when we moved to Hixon from Stowe by Chartley. My dear dad Len, my 2 sisters Rose and Sue and my 2 brothers Gray and Mick. We lived in the Croft no 24, my brother still lives in that house today overlooking the woods that were ...Read more
A memory of Hixon in 1965 by
My First Home
I lived in the prefab you can see on the right of this photograph, 4 Windsor Crescent, and moved there when I was one years old. I loved living there and have many happy memories. Already the council houses were being built ...Read more
A memory of Ingoldmells by
High Cross House And Dorothy Elmhirsts Steinway Grand Piano
On the beautiful Dartington Hall Estate there is a unique “International Modernist House”, now used as a gallery, just to the north-east of Dartington Hall School. High Cross ...Read more
A memory of Dartington Hall in 2012 by
The Arkwrights
We moved to Harlow from London in 1954 when our house was brand new. We lived in The Arkwrights and when it opened I went to St Albans Primary. Later I went to Netteswell Seondary, which has now been demolished. I have so many happy ...Read more
A memory of Harlow in 1954
Captions
91 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
'Stow-on-the-Wold, where the wind blows cold…' runs the ancient rhyme. The highest town in the Cotswolds can certainly be windswept, particularly in the winter.
Stow-on-the-Wold is the junction of eight major roads, including the Roman Fosse Way, and has always attracted travellers from far and wide.
Stowe is of European importance in the history of landscape gardening.
The two main crossings were here, at Stow Bardolph, and at nearby Magdalen bridge: these were droving roads used by cattle traders, and there was formerly a major cattle fair here at Stow.
Built by Lord Cobham of Stowe in 1748 to help regain the assizes for Buckingham, and extended in 1839, the castellated Gothic building has been superbly restored as a fascinating museum
The English Civil War ended at Stow-on-the-Wold when the parliamentarian Sir William Brereton defeated the aged royalist Sir Jacob Astley in 1646.
This Roman Catholic church dedicated to St Mary stands on Stow Hill on the site of an earlier, smaller, edifice.
The dock was recently restored by the National Trust and the Stow River Trust.
Polperro's cottages, many slate-hung and with outside stone staircases, seem to grow out of the very rock, and the town has been poetically described as 'a human bees' nest stowed away in a cranny of the
This old inn, just over the river from London Bridge, was called by Stow 'one of the fair inns' of Southwark.
This old inn, just over the river from London Bridge, was called by Stow ‘one of the fair inns’ of Southwark. In 1720 it was described as ‘well built, handsome, and enjoying a good trade’.
The industrial complex is the tannery of Edward Stow, established in Milton Road from 1896 to 1904. There are maltings against the skyline to the right.
Situated on the Wye just above its junction with the Severn, Chepstow derives its name from Chepe-stow, meaning market town.
Stow's ancient cross in the Square served as a reminder to market traders in medieval times that they should not try to pull the wool over their customers' eyes.
This Roman Catholic church dedicated to St Mary stands on Stow Hill on the site of an earlier, smaller, edifice.
Daniel Defoe records in his 'Tour of Britain' that 20,000 sheep were sold at Stow-on-the-Wold market in the year prior to his visit.
How different this quiet little place might have been had the potential been developed from the chalybeate spring, discovered in 1807 where the road leads out of the village to Stow, as inscribed on
The Stow was to be the New Town's first major shopping centre. The design is Z-shaped, running from north to south to catch as much sunlight as possible, with a square at each end.
'Chepe' and 'stowe' combine to mean 'market place', which indicates the early origins of this town.
Over the next three decades it bought out other brewers in Nailsworth, Stow-on-the-Wold, Northleach, Gloucester, Wickwar and Evesham.
Cannings (left) are first mentioned in 1930, when a Miss Canning had a haberdashery store; Stow's Stores (right) is still in the same place.
Cannings (left) are first mentioned in 1930, when a Miss Canning had a haberdashery store; Stow's Stores (right) is still in the same place.
But their attempt to burgle Tangley Manor between Stow and Burford went less well. The household had been tipped off, and laid a trap.
Middlesex University, the whole has taken on a care-worn air, which even extends to the early 18th-century garden statues by John van Nost, which were brought to the house by Sir Philip Sassoon from Stowe
Places (32)
Photos (170)
Memories (76)
Books (0)
Maps (173)