Places
6 places found.
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Photos
2,208 photos found. Showing results 1,301 to 1,320.
Maps
41 maps found.
Books
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Memories
2,827 memories found. Showing results 651 to 660.
Childhood In Boweryard
I have just read the article written by Ethel Jones in 2008. It brought so many happy memories back for me. When I moved to Ironbridge I went to live at 79 Waterfall Cottage, Boweryard. It was 1946 and I was 10 months ...Read more
A memory of Ironbridge in 1946 by
Schooldays
I was born in Broken Cross and went to the old infant school when Mrs. Richards, Miss Lomax and Mrs. Frith were the teachers there. I seem to remember school concerts being held round the corner in a building ...Read more
A memory of Broken Cross in 1940
A Haunted Cottage
About 10 to 15 years ago I remember reading an article in the Sunday Post concerning a haunted cottage in Auldgirth. Apparently there was a considerable amount of poltergeist activity and eventually a clergyman was called in to ...Read more
A memory of Auldgirth
Brought Up In Tongue End
I, like my brothers, sisters and father went to the primary school in Tongue End, at the time I started Mrs Vantol was Headmistess but was later replaced by Mr and Mrs Gore, the school had around 30 children. Meals were ...Read more
A memory of Tongue End by
Westwell Cottage
I lived here 1950ish, my dad worked on a farm which I think was called Coles Farm. I can remember the village school with a curtain in the middle. My dad's name was Mr Norman Charles Manley, my mum was Winafred Anne Manley.
A memory of Westwell in 1950 by
Working As A Conductor
I remember in 1960 working as a conductor on the 'Western Welsh. My driver was Dai Williams, and my uncle, Danny Evans, was a driver, along with Ernie Sharrott. We had the best Solo card school in town, and I can say now ...Read more
A memory of Bridgend in 1960 by
Conker Trees
I remember getting conkers from the tree by the little sweet shop and cottages near the Methodist school and being chased by geese outside Bertha Deate's shop near the hills and mountains.
A memory of Burgh Heath in 1959 by
Childhood Days
I went with my parents, brother and sister to live at Beech Cottage in the grounds of the big house named The Villa. We went there to escape the bombing at Wallasey (Liverpool). I was four at that time and we stayed ...Read more
A memory of Crosby Garrett in 1930 by
Rectory Cottage
To be honest the year is a little vague to me now, but it would have been around the mid-fifties that I have my first memories of Rectory Cottage. I was brought up in England, but my father John Elwyn was born there and my ...Read more
A memory of Llangattock in 1956 by
Holidays In Amble
My name is Carol Kemp nee Joyce and I was born along the links in a cottage there back in 1944. My mother was called Edna Pile and her mother was Mamie Pile, my Gran, who lived in Amble all her life. I have very fond memories of ...Read more
A memory of Amble in 1948 by
Captions
2,010 captions found. Showing results 1,561 to 1,584.
In 1908 another historian record- ed that 'many modern red-brick cottages are now in process of building to supply the needs of the men who are employed in the Eastleigh Railway Works'.
On the extreme right we can see the chimney of one of the 18th- and 19th-century textile mills which were situated in the valley bottom beside the River Frome; the weavers' cottages occupied
In 1830 Haywards Heath was described as 'a byword for the wilderness of its aspect, the rusticity of its few and scattered cottages, and the miryness of its roads'.
Behind the thatched cottage in Church Street, where the author's great-uncle and great-aunt lived in the late 19th century, is the castle mound built in 1066-71 by William Mallet.
This quiet corner of Bramley includes a picturesque cottage with several cartwheels in the garden.
This picture depicts the spacious village green overlooked by pretty houses and cottages.
In Dawber's Lane the craft of wattle and daub for cruck-built cottages was carried on, but Runshaw Lane has few signs of antiquity today.
Wareham's South Causeway (centre right) is glimpsed between the thatched cottage and the coach. The building beside the latter is the King's Arms (right).
Chulmleigh is an ancient wool town, and its antiquity is reflected in the wealth of old cob and thatch cottages. A fire destroyed many old buildings in 1803.
Once just a hamlet of fishermen's cottages, Budleigh grew as a town and watering place in the first half of the 19th century, when a number of well-heeled society figures took up residence.
Saracen`s Cottage (far left) once accommodated servants and horses whilst their superiors were staying at The Saracen`s Head, Dunmow`s main coaching-inn.
To the right is the thatched Myrtle Cottage.
There are some fine cottages here, and no new housing.
Another of Sussex's seaside villages, Rustington boasts a few flint-walled cottages and a medieval church.
The buildings to the immediate left house the remains of a range of timber-framed cottages; their end frame has been exposed to view within the former building contractor's offices.
Mill Cottage is on the right, and the River Welland is at the other side of the house. The timbers of the upper storey have since been covered over by sandstone-coloured paint.
Here, a little south of Cookham, is the My Lady Ferry with the lock-keeper's cottage on the far bank.
Here we see another church in an attractive location near the small village of Bekesbourne, which contains 18th-century cottages and some modern housing.
The journalist-cum-explorer Henry Morton Stanley was born John Rowlands in a cottage beneath the castle.
This sizeable hamlet on the Downs south of Harting has no church, but boasts some attractive flint cottages and fine scenery.
At the southern limits of the county, close by Diss, this delightful village of knapped flint cottages sits in wooded countryside in the valley of the Little Ouse.
This seemingly idyllic rural summer scene on the banks of the River Brit, with its group of thatched cottages, lines of washing and vegetable garden, is brought acutely into focus by a closer
Beneath all this timber-framing, turrets and fancy brick chimneys is an 18th-century cottage.
Little has changed in this picture over the years – the farm cottage on the left and the Manor House, far right, remain, but the grocer's shop succumbed to supermarket competition and is now a private
Places (6)
Photos (2208)
Memories (2827)
Books (0)
Maps (41)