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 4,581 to 4,600.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
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Memories
10,363 memories found. Showing results 2,291 to 2,300.
Barton On Sea New Milton Hants Dorset
My parents moved from Bournemouth to Barton-on-Sea around 1947, and purchased a business at 18 Whitefield Road, New Milton, and a home at 24 Barton Court Avenue which was our childhood home for ten years ...Read more
A memory of Barton on Sea in 1947 by
2 Solent Drive Walkford
My parents Evelyn and Tom Williams leased this home from the owners (Clarks) from 1959-1961 - it was a big house surrounded by high laurel hedges with a walnut tree in the back garden.
A memory of Walkford by
Recollections Of A Fishmonger
My first sight of South Harrow was when my dad ran a fish stall in the railway market in South Harrow, he worked there for about 10 to 12 years after which he bought a shop of his own in Alexandra Avenue. Coming ...Read more
A memory of South Harrow in 1950
The Roundway I Remember
In 1954 Roundway was the site of the Royal Army Pay Corps Training Centre. Nothing now remains of this except a plaque erected by the local council to commemorate the fact that thousands of young men conscripted for ...Read more
A memory of Roundway in 1954 by
My Time Here
I know my memory wasn't long ago but I love the fact that this school is still standing. I went there in 1998 and left in 2002. I was in the Angles House and we won every music interhouse competition going. I miss my time there soooo ...Read more
A memory of Redditch in 1998 by
Old Hatfield
I was employed as an electrician, by a company known as J.Hodge and spent 18 months in Hatfield House re-wiring the East Wing. I knew Old Hatfield intimately as I lived in Hatfield for 20 years. When I went back there in 1995 I was ...Read more
A memory of Hatfield in 1947 by
Growing Up In The 1980s
I was raised on a lovely estate called Thomas Moore estate, it was all new and I always went wandering all around Finchley from Avenue House to Victoria Park in Finchley central to going to school in Friern Barnet. I ...Read more
A memory of East Finchley in 1983 by
The New Family
My family moved to no 2 Erme Park in 1967 when I was 3. These were of course the new houses. I remember Mr Burrows (father of Cedric/Zedrick) asking me in about 1973 if I was from the new houses. I of course said no as we'd been ...Read more
A memory of Ermington in 1967 by
The Horse Racing Years
My father purchased Waygateshaw House, the Gatehouse, and 27 acres from Mr Campbell in 1989 for an equestrian pursuit, namely training racehorses. We were called Silverbell Racing. We had many visitors from the racing ...Read more
A memory of Crossford in 1989 by
An Evacuee In 1940
I remember my first home in Westbury Leigh was with a family called Rowe, they seemed fairly old people to me (then a ten year old boy) but now I am eighty I don't suppose they were. One of the brothers, a Charles Rowe, ...Read more
A memory of Westbury Leigh by
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Captions
6,914 captions found. Showing results 5,497 to 5,520.
The building on the left is now a bank, while a few doors down was the old lodging house for down-and-outs. Finally, on the left is the old Post Office.
The Customs House was handed over to Sea Cadets in 1942. There is a plethora of pleasure craft in view.
These early 1950s houses are still pairs of semis with a mix of hipped and gabled roofs, the latter with rendered upper floors; they also have the metal-framed 'Crittal' windows which only went out of
For many years it occupied various premises in the Close, including Kings House, before moving from the damp, riverside site in 1847, apparently to escape a cholera epidemic.
It was here, in 1715, that a number of Scottish lords, including the Earl of Mar, met on the pretext of a hunting trip to plan an uprising against the House of Hanover and return the Stuarts to the throne
This village of scattered houses on a steep hillside some seven hundred feet above sea level has two noted literary associations.
The houses are built of local stone. The stream meanders through the centre of the village, and local children play pooh sticks and just watch the stream.
Built in 1819, this five sailer, in working order, now has tea rooms in the mill warehouse whose weatherboarded bag hoist turret is visible between now-demolished houses.
The brick tower windmill of 1770 and 1890 survives, minus its sails, and has been well-converted into a house.
The Quakers favoured this remote area, and founded a Meeting House at Newton-in-Bowland.
The house was divided into three parts in 1919, and is now used as offices by a major building company.
Guildhall House is the white-fronted building on the corner (far centre).
Back at ground level, this view looks across the pond near the church, past the railings alongside the A283 to the houses on the south side of the Green.
Taken opposite Lower Quemerford Mill, this view shows Marden Bridge and the Mill House on the right.
Beyond the shops are the residential houses of Hartington Street. On the left is H Ledgerwood's, a grocer's.
Below the hotel, facing the sea, are many small shops.Towards the bottom of the hill The Gaiety Bazaar may be seen, a treasure-house for holiday gifts.
Copied by James Gibbs from the one at Wilton House in Wiltshire, this bridge from 1738 crosses the end of the Octagon Lake in the grounds of Stowe.
It was demolished in the 1980s, and houses built on the site.
The 15th-century tower of the church stands on Norman foundations, and houses the tomb of the last abbot of St Augustine's abbey at Canterbury who, at the time of the Dissolution, was given the manor
This fairly graceful early 19th-century shopping arcade, with its weatherboarded houses with large shop windows under a colonnade of thin cast iron columns, included a general hardware and implement
The photograph clearly illustrates the village expansion with housing that could literally be anywhere.
The canal bypasses Fleckney on its eastern side; the photograph looks north east across Second Lock, towards Kibworth bridge and Bridge House, as the waterway winds towards Newton Harcourt
After his death in 1837, the house passed to his nephew, and it was converted into a hotel after the latter's death in 1887.
The view shows an abundance of public houses and hotels. At far right three stand side by side - the Theatre Royal, then Clarence and (out of picture) the Cambrian.
Places (80)
Photos (6747)
Memories (10363)
Books (0)
Maps (370)