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Memories
4,583 memories found. Showing results 241 to 250.
Lived Worked And Played Here
My mother was born in keepers cottage in Battle Wood, who grew up and later got married in Battle church. My grandfather, Leonard Glyde was a fireman during the second world war stationed at Battle fire station. I was ...Read more
A memory of Battle by
My Ancestral Ties To Pembroke
Greetings from Canada. Although I have never visited England I have long had a great admiration of Wales. My Great Grandfather who was born in London in 1835 of Welsh parents wrote many notations in margins of a ...Read more
A memory of Pembroke by
Wonderful Times
Having spent many happy holidays in Hemsby, my friend Avril and I decided to sign up for a season in Seacroft, we were just 18 and up for what was then an adventure away from home. It was a very happy time, we made many friends with ...Read more
A memory of Hemsby by
My Time In The Hole
It was and is a dump, a ghetto, one road in or out, nothing was there NOTHING. I attended Wolseley and Fairchild Sec Mod.
A memory of New Addington by
My Parents Were Married Here
My mum and dad were married here and I was christened in this lovely old church. My parents were both from old Crawley families.
A memory of Crawley in 1944 by
The 40/50s
It was the 118 bus Colin. It went from Clapham Common to Mitcham Cricket Green. I also remember well those wonderful Leo's ice lollies. After those awful slabs of lard between 2 wafers that went soggy they were magic - Walls's! My family ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham by
Northolt Childrens Home
I wonder if anyone knows of a childrens home in Northolt. It was around 1958ish my brother's and I were put in the home, it was run by a lady I knew as Auntie Rea. My eldest brother, Edwin, was too old to reside in the ...Read more
A memory of Northolt in 1958 by
Juvenile Wrecking Crew.
I think it mite have been one Sunday in 1954 (cos the plant was nearly deserted) when me, my older bro Roy and 2 or 3 other kids from Hart Lane wound up in the new car parking area of General Motors Vauxhall. As all the cars ...Read more
A memory of Luton
My Happy Childhood In Berkhamsted.
I was born at the Grange Nursing Home in Berkhamsted on November 19th, 1950. My parents were John and Marjorie Stanborough, my father was a school teacher at Park View School which later reverted to Westfield. We ...Read more
A memory of Berkhamsted by
Correction This Is Not Kait Bey Mousque
Hi, This is not Kait Bey mosque, it is Al Emam Alrefaei mosque and the one next to it is Alsultan Hassan mosque. Kait Bey is a different one in another area in Cairo. I was born and lived in this area. We still live there. Thank you for letting us know our error - now corrected. Ed.
A memory of Cairo by
Captions
1,652 captions found. Showing results 577 to 600.
Today, the built-up promenade extends westwards past the houses, but both they and their gardens survive.
Although actually very old, this is another Medway-side village that was left with a distinctly Victorian appearance by the 19th century building boom, when it was a source of brick earth and also chalk
Both Christ Church and St Michael's were bombed during the second world war.
Further down the Thames, Mapledurham Lock by-passes another weir.
Holy Trinity, Laygate, was earlier, having been built in 1832-34 to the designs of Anthony Salvin. Both have since been demolished.
Another fishing village, Polkerris had one of the largest fish cellars in Cornwall, so big that it was known as a fish palace.
Just past the Village Green, the Boot (left), one of the oldest pubs in the village, and the Barley Mow beyond, are both still trading, although the General Stores between them has been demolished to make
It is another very hot summer, with sunglasses a common sight, and hundreds gather to worship the sun. Two ladies model the latest conservative fashions, handbags in hand.
This is another view that has now changed considerably because of the ring road, which could be said to slash its way through here.
Although still labelled Dunton's, the ferry and boat-building business now belongs to the Davy family.
Unusually, both the trams near our camera are facing the same way on adjacent lines.
Frinton's development as a resort began as late as 1885, by which time Walton and Clacton were both well-established. Frinton grew at a slower, more genteel pace.
There were four mills hereabouts that at one time or another were involved in the making of paper, tanning hides and grinding corn.
The western side was then demolished and rebuilt, but it was another seven years before the eastern side was pulled down to give the road the width which exists today.
Both the Town Hall, the stone building on the right, and the Bolton Hotel on the left, are still here today.
Another view that clearly shows the 1883 promenade and sea wall. Before this was built, the beach stretched much further inland and sand dunes often formed as far as Regent Street.
There are no traffic lights here yet - it was to be another ten years before they appeared. Life was simpler for learner drivers then.
A mother is attending to two youngsters, while another child crosses from the boat to the dinghy, a potentially hazardous leap. That was 1965: today the wearing of a lifejacket would be automatic.
Not far distant from the Slaughters are the little villages of Lower and Upper Swell, both situated in an entrancing rural landscape along the banks of the River Dikler.
The Oxfam poster both pre-empts the later popularity of charity-shopping, and also displays an effective line in ironic copywriting. Fading into the distance is the high ground of Thorndon Park.
This gently curving street is to the east of the town. This view, looking back towards the town centre, shows both the Congregational and parish churches.
There is a wonderful mixture of timber-framed, Georgian and Victorian buildings here, which line both sides of the road.
Both privately owned, they later sold out to a major brewery that joined them together in May 1989.
This delightful mill is to be found on the River Blackwater. Few can pass over the hump-backed bridge without pausing to get a better view.
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