Maps

471 maps found.

1947, Far Forest Ref. NPO703247
1945, Forest Gate Ref. NPO707877
1946, Forest Green Ref. NPO707883
1940, Forest Hill Ref. NPO707899
1947, Forest Moor Ref. NPO707934
1947, Forest Town Ref. NPO707984
1925, Aydon Forest Ref. POP629326
1919, Chute Forest Ref. POP668730
1921, Far Forest Ref. POP703247
1920, Forest Hill Ref. POP707901
1924, Forest Holme Ref. POP707908
1923, Macclesfield Forest Ref. POP771315
1896, Forest Gate Ref. RNE707879
1897, Forest Green Ref. RNE707883
1896, Forest Green Ref. RNE707884
1895, Forest Row Ref. RNE707962
1899, Forest Town Ref. RNE707984
1895, New Forest Ref. RNE789752
1940, Liss Forest Ref. NPO756742
1940, New Forest Ref. NPO789752

Books

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

Memories

432 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.

Cramlington Co Op

My family and I used to live at Forest Hall. My grandfather John, Malone, was General Manager for the Co-op, in Cramlington, Forest Hall, Blyth, Seaton Delaval, and Westmoor. I have memories of going with him on a Saturday ...Read more

A memory of Cramlington by Brenda Glover Nee Malone

Forest Hall

My name is Brian and I lived at 26 Granville Drive. In those days the road ended at about No 40 and then there were fields all the way to Backworth. Joyce Dick was a particular friend. We all went to St Bart's Church and what a great vicar we had - George Foster. The Ritz was a must on Saturday.

A memory of Forest Hall by brian.crs

Horney Common As A Child

I was born in London in 1938. When war broke out the following year my father sent my mother and myself down to Devon but soon after that he, and many of his regimental colleagues in the Army, rented a large country ...Read more

A memory of Horney Common in 1940 by Juliet Baxter

Nells Point Barry Island

I was born on 'the Island' and lived there until I was 17 years old. Nell's Point used to be my play ground.I have many fond memories of counting the coaches that used to bring the visitors from far and wide, the ...Read more

A memory of Barry Island in 1959 by Chris Maidment

A Great Place To Live

Having been born and brought up in Buckhusrt Hill in the 1960s and 1970s and 1980s and now living in Kent, it reminds me what a unique place it once was. My immediate memories are of Lords Bushes and living in Forest ...Read more

A memory of Buckhurst Hill by Andrew Evans

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

Can Anyone Remember Penycraig In 1940 ?

Searching for a Nantymoel soldier of the 8th Btn Sherwood Foresters who fought the Germans in Norway in April 1940 as part of the ill-fated Norwegian campaign of the "Sickleforce" /148th Infantry Brigade ...Read more

A memory of Penygraig by S N Johansen

Ccefn Fforest

My memories of Cefn Fforest were of Whitson marches in your new clothes and having sore feet where your new sandles rubbed your feet raw. Along with 'Thomas The Milk' was Pughs Farm who had a horse and cart delivering the ...Read more

A memory of Cefn by David Dunstan

Roundabout And Big Tree

I used to live in Lawrie Park Gardens from 1955 until 1962 and the local youngsters used to congregate at the big tree on the roundabout at the end of Lawrie Park Avenue. At times there were around 10-15 of us all sitting ...Read more

A memory of Sydenham by Jackie Walder

Childhood And Adult Memories

I was born in Thorpe Combe in 1937 and went to Hale End Road, Wood Street and then William Morris Tech. Schools. My surname then was Bowers. As a fairly young child we used to play over in Epping Forest, having a ...Read more

A memory of Walthamstow in 1930 by Jean Elphick

Captions

369 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.

Caption For Faygate, The Village 1929

A small village at the western edge of St Leonards Forest, on the main road and railway line between Horsham and Crawley. Local legends say that dragons and serpents inhabited the forest.

Caption For Fordingbridge, Bridge Street C1960

In earlier days this route marked the only highway in and out of the Forest from this direction.

Caption For Bainbridge, The Green 1906

It is believed that Bainbridge was a settlement for woodsmen working in the great forest of Wensleydale.

Caption For New Forest, Ponies 1913

The famous New Forest ponies are only wild in the sense that they are not broken in. All of the ponies are owned by someone, though they may stay out in the Forest through all the seasons of the year.

Caption For Lyndhurst, The Grand Hotel C1955

There are many wide open spaces around Lyndhurst, where the Forest meets the town. They are good places for a stroll if the depths of the old hunting forest are too daunting.

Caption For Hythe, High Street C1955

Hythe was once the port of the New Forest; a settlement survived here after the Conquest, despite the excesses of William the Conqueror.

Caption For Forest Row, The Village 1902

An evocative view of wide shaggy grass verges, children and deserted roads characterises this view of Forest Row, the Ashdown Forest village that grew up on the site of Royal hunting lodges.

Caption For Emery Down, New Forest Inn C1960

The New Forest Inn is another popular hostelry at Emery Down.

Caption For Forest Row, 1931

Here we see a busy scene in Forest Row's attractive centre on the London to Eastbourne Road (A22). Forest Row grew after the arrival of the railway in 1866, and became a parish in 1894.

Caption For Lyndhurst, High Street 1897

Much of the administrative work of the New Forest is carried out here. Five times a year the Verderers meet here to discuss important Forest business.

Caption For Lyndhurst, Crown Hotel 1897

That great huntsman William I held the manor of Lyndhurst in his own hands after the land around was taken in as a hunting forest.

Caption For Brockenhurst, The Village 1949

The village of Brockenhurst lies in one of the most attractive parts of the New Forest, and many of its cottages are of considerable antiquity.

Caption For Emery Down, The Post Office C1955

The roads of the New Forest tend to be much busier these days than they were when this photograph was taken.

Caption For Epping, Charcoal Burning C1955

Epping Forest, which now covers some 6,000 acres, was ten times larger in the 17th century.

Caption For New Forest, Ponies, Swan Green C1955

Many of the cottages inside the Forest boundary are of considerable antiquity, being either renovations or replacements of buildings that have stood on the same sites for centuries; it is hard to imagine

Caption For Loughton, Lopping Hall C1955

A blue plaque recalls that this was built in 1883 out of compensation paid for the loss of tree-lopping rights in Epping Forest.

Caption For New Forest, Pigs Near Brook C1955

Many original farms in the New Forest had the ancient common right of pannage, the right to turn out pigs into the Forest to feed on mast and acorns.

Caption For Little Budworth, Oulton Mill Pool C1960

It lies within the old Delamere Forest, and nearby there is a small section of that original forest surviving – it is considered so important that it is now a Site of Special Scientific Interest

Caption For Ringwood, Market Place 1890

Ringwood stands on the banks of the meandering River Avon, at the New Forest's western boundary. A Saxon town in origin, it may get its name from its location.

Caption For Whitewell, The Hotel 1921

Now 'The Inn at Whitewell', the place has a reputation for serving good food and was built towards the end of the 14th century as a manor house by Walter Urswyck, a Keeper in the Royal Forest.

Caption For Clumber Park, C1955

Clumber Park, like Rufford, is heavily wooded; it was enclosed out of Sherwood Forest, that great forest that extends from Worksop southwards almost to Nottingham.

Caption For Wyre Forest, Hawkbatch Visitor Centre 2003

Wyre Forest has a popular visitor centre with a restaurant and shop. It specialises in woodland displays, and organises outings with children in mind.

Caption For Oakley, The Church C1960

Oakley was within the medieval royal hunting forest of Bernwood - the king's hunting lodge cum palace was at Brill nearby. The name of the village means 'a clearing in the oak woods'.

Caption For Colemans Hatch, Newbridge 1928

Colemans Hatch is a good example of one of the 14th-century settlements that developed along the edges of the forest and waste; its name implies an old entrance into the forested area.