Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chatsworth House, Derbyshire
- Osborne House, Isle of Wight
- Brambletye House, Sussex
- Ickworth House, Suffolk
- Kingston Lacy House, Dorset
- Boscobel House, Shropshire
- Preshute House, Wiltshire
- Bolton Houses, Lancashire
- Brick Houses, Yorkshire
- Quaking Houses, Durham
- Water Houses, Yorkshire
- Bottom House, Staffordshire
- New House, Kent
- Mite Houses, Cumbria
- Lyneham House, Devon
- Church Houses, Yorkshire
- Dye House, Northumberland
- Spittal Houses, Yorkshire
- Street Houses, Yorkshire
- Tow House, Northumberland
- Halfway House, Shropshire
- Halfway Houses, Kent
- High Houses, Essex
- Flush House, Yorkshire
- White House, Suffolk
- Wood House, Lancashire
- Bank Houses, Lancashire
- Lower House, Cheshire
- Marsh Houses, Lancashire
- Chapel House, Lancashire
- Close House, Durham
- Guard House, Yorkshire
- Hundle Houses, Lincolnshire
- Hundred House, Powys
- Thorley Houses, Hertfordshire
- School House, Dorset
Photos
6,747 photos found. Showing results 3,881 to 3,900.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
10,343 memories found. Showing results 1,941 to 1,950.
Pear Tree Lane House?
My grandmother (Edith Florence Pawley) worked in service in Shorne (I have a very badly damaged photo). I have a postcard written to her from her fiance, addressed to her c/o Mrs Levy, Court Wood, Pear tree Lane, Shorne, probably ...Read more
A memory of Shorne by
Good Old Days,
Hi my name is Brian Aspey I was at mobberley 1964 to 66 my number was 93. Me berry was the head big fella I was in shaftbury house they had just been build.dose any one remember a coloured boy think his name was joey rose and another boy called Donald Lindsey.
A memory of Mobberley
The Park Etc.
I lived in Th ePark 1954 till 1963.I went to Grange Juniors and Seniors too.My front gate was right opposite the third gate to Ealing Girls Grammar too.That it now part of the University.Byron and Noel Houses are still there.There had ...Read more
A memory of Ealing by
Schooldays At Bexley Tech In Townley Rd, 1961 66,
I was at Hall Place for a year in 1961, originally at Brook Street girls school, Northumberland Heath. I loved it there, was there recently remembering happy days. At the main school in Townley Rd I ...Read more
A memory of Bexleyheath by
Iverson F.C.
In the early sixties I played football for a local Kilburn team call Iverson F.C. which was managed by Alf Taylor for many years. Alf and his wife Ethel and daughter Pat lived in Ariel road which was a turning off of Iverson ...Read more
A memory of Kilburn by
1 The Hollies, Little Sutton, (Now Called Tara A Wee?)
Hi , can anyone help. My great grandparents Kate and William James Collins lived at 1 The Hollies, approx. date 1930,s the cottage is still standing on the A41, just on the corner before you turn ...Read more
A memory of Little Sutton by
Beryl Baker
I met Beryl Baker is 1949 when we were patients at a convalescent home in Exmouth. I was 10 and Beryl would have been about the same age. During the month that we were there, we became firm friends. We corresponded for years ...Read more
A memory of Gilfach goch by
14 Years 'on The Post'
On the right hand side of this photo is the Post Office, & on the extreme right is the Delivery Office ‘deck’. This is where the lorries of mail were unloaded. These would arrive through the night, & the mail ...Read more
A memory of Great Malvern by
Hayes 1949 1971
I was born in Hayes at 3, Botwell Lane which was a big old house (now grade 2 listed) divided into three flats. As a young child it was a creepy old place and said to be haunted. I believe nuns lived there at one point and during the ...Read more
A memory of Hayes by
Living In Teddington 1950s To 1980s
We moved from 76 Princes Road in 1957 to the other end of Teddington, to 143 High Street, opposite Kingston Lane. My parents bought the house for about £1400 (yes fourteen hundred) as a refurb project. It still had ...Read more
A memory of Teddington
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Captions
6,914 captions found. Showing results 4,657 to 4,680.
The Red Lion public house and the National Westminster Bank in the centre of the picture are still there, but Burgon's grocery store (right) is long gone.
High House Farm, far right, was the home of the dominant agricultural owner in the 17th century.
Three miles inland from Hornsea, Seaton was an estate village surrounding the old manor house. It has two village greens and a pond.
Hipswell Hall is a 15th-century fortified manor house built for the Fulthorpe family, whose coat of arms is carved on the bay window to the right.
Stone-built weavers' houses, carpet weaving mills, and rope works all jostled for space along the banks of the river.
As more and more injured men came back from the front, a larger hut hospital was built on the playing fields of King's and Clare Colleges, with 'open-air' wards such as this one housing the patients.
The road on the right, Vaughan Road, now leads into an estate with a number of new houses.
Today the National Provincial Bank has been replaced by the Tudor House Hotel, which occupies the same building.
By the middle 1930s the Borough Council had outgrown the offices at the Town Hall, and departments were housed in various buildings around the town.
The view from Kingston Lacy House shows the wooded Badbury Rings on the horizon.
Housing now lines the eastern side of Forest Gate Road.
A new house was built to a design by Alfred Waterhouse, the architect of St Pancras Station and London's Natural History Museum.
This now allows access to the car park behind the manor house, some doors along. The post office is four doors down on the left. It still has a date stone of 1901 beneath the roof.
The shop on the right is no longer a shop, now just a house. Today the pub on the left is the Master Builder, and owned by Wadworth's.
Upper Stroud is in the distance, with Park Road below, still at this period containing only a few large private houses.
Until the modern causeway was built in 1980, this medieval bridge provided the only crossing point over the River Ouse between Huntingdon and Earith.
This attractive terrace of houses lies close to the sea on the north side of the Headland, which is beyond the buildings in the centre distance.
This parade of large shops and houses are just round the corner from the station. The pebbly storm beach gives way to a vast fine sandy beach, covered in this photograph by a high tide.
In the 1960s the Dave Clarke Five played in the Mecca in Blenheim House. The nightclub was later called Raquel's - it closed in the 1970s.
The vaguely Art Deco style of Shirley House (left) contrasts with the Gothic look of the Baptist church, but Stratford Road today is a much more eclectic mix than it was in the 1960s.
The assassin hid in a house belonging to John Hamilton, Archbishop of St Andrews. Moray's friends hanged Hamilton at Stirling in 1571. They did not go to the expense of a trial.
The red and white pinnacles of the tower, just visible in the picture, remind one of the tower of a Tudor house.
Close by St John's Gate is this narrow alley of tall tile-hung shops and houses, which lean precariously over so that residents might almost stretch out and shake hands from their windows.
This quaint old house sits on a corner in Lincoln's Inn Fields.
Places (80)
Photos (6747)
Memories (10343)
Books (0)
Maps (370)