Places
9 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,352 photos found. Showing results 1,021 to 1,040.
Maps
776 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
2,733 memories found. Showing results 511 to 520.
Thatcham 1951 1962
The shop opposite the White Hart public house, owned by Simonds, was called Lays Stores. My mother and father bought it in 1952 and ran it till it closed in 1962. Before that, they owned the fish and chip shop which has now ...Read more
A memory of Thatcham by
St. Abbs Haven
Lived in Leeds but spent two weeks holiday at the Haven - breakfast, lunch, high tea, dinner, supper - for most years in the 60's. (imagine the cost of that nowadays). Great memories of sports days, beach, summer pavillion (half way ...Read more
A memory of St Abbs in 1964 by
Tottenham In The 50s
I was born in Mount Pleasant Rd in 1947 and lived there until 1959 when we moved to Norfolk, attended Bruce Grove Jnr School and then Rowland Hill. I can remember being taken home from school by my teacher during the smog ...Read more
A memory of Tottenham by
Isabella Pickering
Hi all, Just need to pick people's brains, I'm looking for anyone who may remember an Isabella Pickering, she was Headmistress at the Frosterley junior mixed school from 1927 until most likely the 40s or 50s, although when ...Read more
A memory of Frosterley by
Statutory Swingin'
As a young lad in the “swingin 60’s”, the swingin’ rather passed me by … and no regrets there. But the word puts me in mind of the swinging we did do. Just down the lane from Allsopp’s garage – the hallowed source of ...Read more
A memory of Ashby-de-la-Zouch in 1969 by
Great Niece Of Joseph Henry Lachlan White
My great uncle's home. I had heard about Bredfield House all my life because it belonged to my great uncle, Joseph Henry Lachlan White. I only saw it in 1960, however, long after it had been demolished ...Read more
A memory of Bredfield in 1960 by
My First School
The Anson family arrived at Strensall in 1957. My father was at the camp as a 'skill at arms' instructor until 1959 attached to the K.O.Y.L.I. I can remember the first day at school in Strensall village.I caught the bus which ...Read more
A memory of Strensall in 1957 by
Memories Of Sandy
I lived in Sandy between about 1963 and 1979 and have seen changes even in that short time. It was a fairly quiet village when we first came in spite of the adjacent A1. I went to St Swithuns school in St Neots Road, then Sandy ...Read more
A memory of Sandy by
Anyone Recognise The Surname Lejeune Or Lejaune?
My father, who is now 92, is very keen to know what happened to the girlfriend of his war service years. He has given me the name Christina Lejeune. However, he also insists it was Lejaune! His ...Read more
A memory of New Malden in 1945 by
Those Were The Days
I remember Gosforth High Street as a being a fun place with all the great shops; the Toy Cupboard now Robinsons, the photography shop, there was Maynards the sweet shop, Boydelles the toy shop, and Moods which was a gift shop. ...Read more
A memory of Gosforth in 1969 by
Captions
1,642 captions found. Showing results 1,225 to 1,248.
On the right are the Edwardian buildings occupied by Marlow's from 1925 to 1975, Watson's Post Office and the Queens Head.
The building in front of the church was the vicarage; it replaced the original, which stood in Burr's meadow behind the concrete posts and fencing on the left of the picture.
On the other side of the road is the lamp-post which was first in the Market Square, with its black-painted cast iron base.
Behind the Post Office is the Parish Church with its 16th-century tower - it became a cathedral in 1918.
Port Sunlight was the dream of William Lever, a man who believed that there was good in everyone; only the best would do for his workers and employees.
For example, 'stage coaches, post chaises or sociable Berlins' cost 3d, droves of oxen or cows 3d per score and calves or hogs a halfpenny less.
The dramatic 150 ft spire of this church dedicated to St Mary soars over the Tenby rooftops, and is reputedly the largest parish church in Wales.
The Norman church keeps the registers of Kingston, a village long lost due to coastal erosion. Highdown Hill, 269 feet high, was a Roman dwelling place and Saxon burial ground.
The Post Office has transferred to Brand Street; Briggs & Co., the Leicester Boot Company with its impressive gilded sign, and the Maypole Dairy, share its old premises.
The wooden posts erected to mark out the gardens of the row stopped visitors peer- ing through the windows, and helped give the inhabitants a little bit of privacy.
Next door, with the two gabled doorways, stands the post office, built in 1887 on the site of the Old Court House.
Down the north side of the street are the post office, and the Great House, where William Pitt the Elder, Earl of Chatham brought his 15-year-old son, Pitt the Younger, to recover from illness
As this is a market town, the town centre has a remarkable number of hotels and hostelries; on the right is the Griffin Hotel, established in the 16th century, an important posting house
Bicycles piled against the lamp post on the right constitute a thief's delight with not a padlock and chain between them. And the piled tins in the shop window?
The newsagent on the corner survived until recently, and the post office has moved up the road a little.
The Cheam Brewery had previously occupied this site from the 12th century, and its cellars lie underneath the triangular grassed areas marked by white posts with linking chains.
Wilkinson's took over from Fine Fare (right) at the same time as the decorated art work on the pediment above the blank front was lost.
The two girls are wearing knitted hats, an essential part of post-war dress. Oulton was another of the series of medieval broads stretching northward into Norfolk.
They now share a tomb and epitaph: 'Inmate in grave, he took his grandchild heir, Whose soul did haste to make to him repair, And so to heaven along as little page With him did post, to wait upon
Its access value lay in the proximity to the main post office and the central police station, both of which were in walking distance via the narrow road on the left.
The shop with its attrac- tive front remains in post office use, and the other buildings have new plastic windows; but stopping the long view, without being intrusive, is a new estate of houses,
It stands on the foundations of a fort built about 1639 by Sir Arthur Hill after he left a post at Carrickfergus Castle. It was given Royal approval and the garrison was paid for.
Crosby Mill is a good example of a tower mill, a design that appeared after the post mill was established.
Then turning left up Church Hill we pass the old post office on the way to Crake Hall below the church, and the Old Rectory.
Places (9)
Photos (2352)
Memories (2733)
Books (0)
Maps (776)