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Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Low Row, Yorkshire
- Low Bentham, Yorkshire
- Low Hutton, Yorkshire (near Malton)
- Low Fell, Tyne and Wear
- Low Dalby, Yorkshire
- Lowe, Shropshire
- Fenton Low, Staffordshire
- Low Angerton, Northumberland
- Low Barugh, Yorkshire
- Low Bradley, Yorkshire
- Low Ellington, Yorkshire
- Low Fulney, Lincolnshire
- Low Gate, Northumberland
- Low Laithe, Yorkshire
- Low Leighton, Derbyshire
- Low Marnham, Nottinghamshire
- Low Snaygill, Yorkshire
- Low Street, Essex
- Low Town, Shropshire
- Low Valleyfield, Fife
- Low Barlings, Lincolnshire
- Low Bradfield, Yorkshire
- Low Burnham, Humberside
- Low Grantley, Yorkshire
- Low Hauxley, Northumberland
- Low Hawsker, Yorkshire
- Low Hesket, Cumbria
- Low Whita, Yorkshire
- Lowes Barn, Durham
- Cauldon Lowe, Staffordshire
- Low Borrowbridge, Cumbria
- Low Bridge, Wiltshire
- Low Coniscliffe, Durham
- Low Crosby, Cumbria
- Low Grounds, Yorkshire
- Low Torry, Fife
Photos
251 photos found. Showing results 301 to 251.
Maps
509 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
637 memories found. Showing results 151 to 160.
Ightham Village
My sisters Rita, Susan and me all attended Ightham Primary School, the headmaster was Mr Foster, he travelled every day from Maidstone by car, Mrs Kath Gordon, Miss Tomkins being the other teachers, Mrs Hussey replacing Miss ...Read more
A memory of Ightham by
Fitzroy Street, Off Westderby Road. 1950s/60s
Did anyone live around here in the 1950s & 60s? My memories are of being sent to search out the sandstone on the Hollas so that my mum could do the steps. Going to the coal yard off Low Hill with ...Read more
A memory of Liverpool by
German Aircraft
In the early 1940s my father was a coastguard stationed at Barry Island. I was about 5 years old and I vividly remember that one day I was sat on my 3-wheeled bike at the top of the hill and a German aircraft flew over at a ...Read more
A memory of Barry Island in 1940 by
Garnetts
I am interested in Woodend Farm at Low Biggins, my husband's Garnett ancesters farmed there. They came from Wray, and there are still many descendents in the area. Any information or memory relating to the farm or the family would be useful. Many thanks, Chris
A memory of Lowerhouse by
Freefolk Priors
I have fond memories of Freefolk. I stayed at Freefolk Priors with my Aunt Babs and her three boys around about 1963. We would go down there for the duration of the school holidays and stay in her little house which overlooked the ...Read more
A memory of Freefolk in 1963 by
“Play Up, Play Up, And Play The Game!”
My memory bank has been activated by the contributed items about Hugh Bell Central School, though my recollections of Hugh Bell are older than those published on this website. My years at Hugh Bell were 1938 ...Read more
A memory of Middlesbrough in 1940 by
Junior Years 1947 1951
The junior years at Sydney Road School were quite good for me, despite the fact that I was the worst fighter in our year. Before a blow had even touched me I would be crying [talk about Coward of the ...Read more
A memory of Intake in 1951 by
The Rose And Crown
Ivy Myers. I wonder how many people from Chalfont remember the "Rose and Crown", a Benskins pub. My father owned it from 1946 until 1950. There was also the “Kings Head” which was on the corner of Joiners Lane. Of ...Read more
A memory of Chalfont St Peter in 1949 by
My Memoirs 1964 1966 Part One
Wayne Carter My father is Frederick Carter born in London, and mother was Loraine Carter nee Chadwick was born Cyfarthfa Street Roath; mum sadly passed away in 1998. I have a younger sister Jane Carter nee ...Read more
A memory of St Mellons in 1964 by
The 1950s
Although I didn't live at Hamsterley Colliery, I spent all my school holidays with my grandmother, Mary Willis who lived in the top bungalow at Derwent Haven. She lived to be nearly a 100 which I suppose justified ...Read more
A memory of Hamsterley by
Captions
472 captions found. Showing results 361 to 384.
The crews of several Lowestoft-registered trawlers take advantage of low water to carry out maintenance on the hulls of their vessels. Note that the capstan fires are kept lit.
The war memorial is now in a low walled area as part of the precinct's hard landscaping.
Above are 14th-century west towers, and beyond the great central tower soars, which can be seen from many locations in the low-rise town and beyond.
The Plaiting School in the village employed village ladies and children who supplemented the low agricultural wages by weaving strips of straw, called plait, to the hat-making trade in Luton.
The low door on the right marked the chief telegraph office of Belfast, and in 1870 it was open seven days a week from 6am to 3am by Greenwich Mean Time.
The standard plan puts the main entrance up two steps, with the assembly hall on the left under a low pitched roof, the boiler chimney in the middle, and classrooms to the right.
The housewife in the 1950s had a daily trip to the shops, as the private ownership of refrigerators was fairly low, and dairy products and meat could not be kept for long.
At low tide, these broad sands offer plenty of space for youngsters to enjoy their summer fun.
Christ Church was erected in 1838 and comprised a chancel, nave and a low tower, but it was soon replaced by a new building designed by Maxwell & Tuke.
The building was occupied by Halfords, and is now the Oxfam shop. The two low buildings next to Redwoods have had a wide range of uses, from nurseries to restaurants.
The low brick building, with Ketton stone facings, cost £8,000.
The road works warned of by the sign were never likely to be the cause of too many traffic jams when car ownership was still quite low and the availability and use of public transport correspondingly
The long, low 17th-century house, right, has fine stone-mullioned and drip- headed windows.
The telephone box is still in the same position, although a new brick-based post box has been installed, and goods for sale have now spilled out onto the pavement.
The 15th-century local granite and limestone church tower of St Peter and St Paul shows above the low rise houses which bound The Green; it was heavily 'restored' in 1872 by F W Ordish.
In March 1902 she sold the hall and its 62 acres to Burnley for the very low price of £17,500, and paid for the art gallery it housed.
The building we see here is largely Elizabethan; we know from the local records that it was `new-builded` in 1597, but archaeologists have now worked out that some of the internal timbers date
The low brick building, with Ketton stone facings, cost £8,000.
Longshanks trusted de Newark enough to send him on diplomatic missions to the Low Countries, and as well to Rome to discuss matters relating to the crusades.
The standard plan puts the main entrance up two steps, with the assembly hall on the left under a low pitched roof, the boiler chimney in the middle, and classrooms to the right.
This is a village in two halves, High Town and Low Town, a quarter mile apart. Land around here was once one of the royal hunting grounds. The White Horse, a chalk hill figure, was carved in 1857.
Behind the spot where the photographer must have stood is Windrush Valley School, founded in 1951, and the low building on the extreme right of the picture, next to the three-gabled house
Low tide in the Basin of what was still generally known as Bridport Harbour. Sailing vessels are grounded on their keels. The prominent building is the George Hotel (left).
The view is westwards to the ledges of Cann Harbour (centre left) extending into Lyme Bat at low tide.
Places (90)
Photos (251)
Memories (637)
Books (0)
Maps (509)