Places
26 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Town End, Derbyshire
- Town End, Buckinghamshire
- Town's End, Somerset
- Towns End, Dorset
- Town End, Merseyside
- Town End, Cambridgeshire
- Town's End, Buckinghamshire
- West End Town, Northumberland
- Bolton Town End, Lancashire
- Kearby Town End, Yorkshire
- Town End, Cumbria (near Grange-Over-Sands)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Bowness-On-Windermere)
- Town End, Yorkshire (near Huddersfield)
- Town End, Yorkshire (near Wilberfoss)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Appleby-in-Westmorland)
- Town's End, Dorset (near Melbury Osmond)
- Town's End, Dorset (near Swanage)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Ambleside)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Lakeside)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Kirkby Lonsdale)
- Town End, Cumbria (near Ambleside)
- Town's End, Dorset (near Bere Regis)
- West-end Town, South Glamorgan
- Townend, Derbyshire
- Townend, Strathclyde (near Dumbarton)
- Townend, Staffordshire (near Stone)
Photos
23 photos found. Showing results 1,261 to 23.
Maps
195 maps found.
Books
3 books found. Showing results 1,513 to 3.
Memories
3,719 memories found. Showing results 631 to 640.
Wartime In Ivybridge 1939
I was one of ten little girls, plus our teacher, who arrived in Ivybridge as evacuees from Acton, London, at the outbreak of the Second World War. We were taken to a hall (probably at the school) where we were ...Read more
A memory of Ivybridge in 1940 by
An Ashbourne Childhood
My family moved to Ashbourne in 1942 when I was 6. I went to school at what must have been the last of the old "Dame" schools run by an elderly lady called Ethel Hunter. The school was at the top of a big house in Church ...Read more
A memory of Ashbourne in 1943
Redditch Town Centre.
I remember Huins shoe shop, and Evesham Street. I worked for a time in Liptons. I went to college in Birmingham and returned to Redditch to work in N. H. Harris hairdressers in Market Place, above the Singer sewing machine ...Read more
A memory of Redditch in 1960 by
Constructing Mayflower Ii
When I was young we would holiday in a caravan at a site near to Hollicombe in between Torquay and Brixham. As we lived in Walsall in the West Midlands this journey, by coach, was not to be undertaken lightly and a day ...Read more
A memory of Brixham in 1956 by
The Sycamores
My grandfather, Gerard Murgatroyd, was born in a house in Knutsford called "The Sycamores" in 1879. I live in Montreal and my father died in 1949 when I was two. My grandfather died before my parents met and there was no love lost ...Read more
A memory of Knutsford in 1989 by
Town End Farm In High Casterton
My family owned Town End farm in High Casterton from (at least) the mid 1600s to 1878. It was originally owned by Nicholas Hynde, but was inherited by his daughter Jane who married Joseph Baylie/Bayley, and was ...Read more
A memory of Casterton by
Saturday Morning Pictures
Guessing around 1069, I'd been about 10 then. I have many memories of going to Saturday morning cinema with my sister, and I remember my dad telling me of having similar memories. I lived at the top of St John's Hill, ...Read more
A memory of Battersea in 1969 by
Griffin Press.
I was an apprentice bookbinder at the Griffin Press on Osborne Road between 1969 and 1975. While there, I met my wife Gloria('nee Fowler') who worked in the stationers shop of Hughes and Son Ltd in the town. I remember Sheila ...Read more
A memory of Pontypool in 1969 by
This Was Thee Place To Go.
Cavendish Grammar had their speech day there one year. Wells Dressing events were held there too. Tea dances. Satrurday night dances. During the war years and afterwards the Pavillion Gardens Concert Hall was tops for ...Read more
A memory of Buxton in 1943 by
50s 60s Memories
I was born at 13 Alma Place (up the small alley from Argent Street) in 1952, moving to number 6 when I was 5. When I was 9 we moved to Sherfield Road, where I lived until 1970 when we finally moved to Shipston-on-Stour, ...Read more
A memory of Grays by
Captions
5,054 captions found. Showing results 1,513 to 1,536.
A veritable oasis of calm after the hustle and bustle of Haverfordwest town center.
The expansive market place has long been the commercial hub of the town. On market days it echoes Yarmouth's seafaring traditions, the colourful awnings stretching out like waves to the horizon.
FOR MANY YEARS, after the decline of the weaving industry, the manufacture of rubber linked the two West Wiltshire towns of Bradford on Avon and Melksham.
Next to the draper's shop on the left is Walmsley's Stationers and Bookshop.The large window proudly proclaims that they have a Bible and Prayer Book Department.The horse-drawn tram heads off towards
A fishing settlement existed here from early times, the town being burnt by French raiders during the reign of Richard II.
Until relatively recent times, the sea was a vital artery for supplying the town. In late summer the pilchard shoals would arrive and the town was a bustle of small boats.
The marketplace here was probably laid out in the 13th century, and some of the buildings in the Old Town are 17th-century.
Just off Main Road, Junction Road lies sufficiently distant from the hubbub of the market and town centre to provide a tranquil setting for tasteful town villas.
Parks were an important feature in many Victorian industrial towns and served as an escape from the noise, dirt and labour of the mills and factories.
As the railway did not arrive until 1874, the town remained unspoilt by mass tourism, especially as the beach was shingle.
Forever associated with its famous International Eisteddfod, Llangollen stands on the River Dee, seen here from the four-arched town bridge.
The wide sweep of cobbles and double avenue of trees defines this characteristic view on entering the town from the west.
Burnley was one of the few towns where steam trams were employed after the horse buses and before the electric trams that the corporation introduced in the early 1900s.
Simultaneous construction of the castle and town wall began in the summer of 1283. The wall, which enclosed the medieval borough, is 800 yds long with eight towers and two twin-towered gateways.
'A township, parochial chapelry, market town, corporate and parliamentary borough', was how Clitheroe was described in 1840.
Since 1958 when the first shops began opening, Basildon town centre has been the home for a whole host of differing consumer needs.
This was a bold statement of the strength of non-conformity in the town; at 182 feet, it outshone the seemingly insignificant towers of the parish churches.
What an unusual combination of goods the trader is selling in the third shop from the right: fishing tackle and fireworks! Today this large town by the River Medway looks very different.
Jarrow's seven-acre pedestrian shopping precinct opened for business in February 1961; it was all part of a grand scheme to rid the town of its cloth cap image and to drag it into the modern age.
This vast open Market Hall was constructed in 1875, and the roof, carried on elaborately decorated cast-iron pillars and supports, covers an area of some 3,500 square yards.
This view emphasises the rather stern aspect of the town. Its major attraction is the Oldersfleet Castle ruins, near Curran Point and the harbour.
By this time, calico-printing was losing its position as the town's main industry, and the production of porcelain sanitary ware was taking over.
Whilst the open fields still surrounded Loughborough the town could not expand; later they were enclosed by law and the pattern of small fields emerged.
The town's name is pronounced 'Lemster' and this is how the word was sometimes spelt on old milestones.
Places (26)
Photos (23)
Memories (3719)
Books (3)
Maps (195)