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Places
30 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Trerice Manor, Cornwall
- Iford Manor, Wiltshire
- Manor Royal, Sussex
- Manor, The, Sussex
- Manor Estate, Yorkshire
- Cliton Manor, Bedfordshire
- Manor Bourne, Devon
- Manor Park, Berkshire
- Manor Park, Sussex
- Manor Parsley, Cornwall
- Owton Manor, Cleveland
- Sutton Manor, Merseyside
- Manor Park, Nottinghamshire
- Burton Manor, Staffordshire
- Uphill Manor, Avon
- Reen Manor, Cornwall
- Hood Manor, Cheshire
- Manor Park, Buckinghamshire
- Walton Manor, Oxfordshire
- Weston Manor, Isle of Wight
- Landguard Manor, Isle of Wight
- Wightwick Manor, West Midlands
- Ruislip Manor, Greater London
- Manor House, West Midlands
- Manor Powis, Central Scotland
- Manor Park, Greater London
- Manor Hill Corner, Lincolnshire
- Manor Park, Yorkshire (near Sheffield)
- Manor Park, Cheshire (near Middlewich)
- Manor Park, Yorkshire (near Ilkley)
Photos
1,067 photos found. Showing results 121 to 140.
Maps
175 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
726 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.
Grandmother Lived In Penny Bridge Manor
My grandmother Sarah Hewitt was supposed to have lived in Penny Bridge manor and had a sister, I think, who drowned crossing the river - before the bridge was put in, maybe? - but I cannot find any information on her or her family. I would really appreciate any information. What a beautiful place!!
A memory of Penny Bridge by
Tin Tan Tommy
I moved to the hill as a child with my brother and sisters in the early 1950as to Dagnam Park Square. We had a lovely wood there to play in. Tin Tan Tommy was our best game, standing on the sand bin spying out the other kids and ...Read more
A memory of Harold Hill in 1956 by
Manor Road Sidcup
I was born in Farnborough hospital in June 1956. My mother is Austrailian and my father grew up in and around Bridgwater in Somerset. From the period of 1956 -1960 we lived in the top flat at 12 Manor Road (now sadly gone), the ...Read more
A memory of Sidcup in 1956 by
Chingford Hatch
I remember the Manor pub, it used to have an air raid warning siren on the building. I remember hearing it once, testing it I think as the year was about 1956. I too remember the tea van which had an awning on it in the rain. As ...Read more
A memory of Chingford in 1956 by
The Good Old Days
I lived in Streethouse but when I was 4 we moved to the newish estate at the top of the 'Knob' (North Featherstone). We lived at 49 Manor Drive, next door to the Simkins. My dad was a miner at Sharlston and Snydale ...Read more
A memory of Featherstone by
August 25th, 1892
I have photos of Walreddon Manor from my ancestors who lived there in the 1890s. One is similar to the photo here, but was taken in August of 1892, and the back inscription, written about the same time, said the children were ...Read more
A memory of Tavistock in 1890 by
Two Properties In The 1930s
Before the Second World War my grandfather, Donald MacVitie, was a builder who renovated properties in the Cheltenham, Tewkesbury area, often living in them during or after doing the work. The Old Forge at ...Read more
A memory of Aston on Carrant
Kimbolton/Alcombury
My father was stationed at Alcombury and we were lucky to live with the Hunt family in a manor house. Mr. Hunt worked at the school. I went to school in Bedford as a weekly boarder. The Hunts' daughter was my friend and we ...Read more
A memory of Kimbolton in 1955 by
Walton Colliery
My name is Roland Mitchell. I worked at Walton colliery as a haulage hand. I worked alongside Percy Heckles, Alan Jennings, Phillip Casgoin and Phillip Redmond and a young lad by the name of George Bernard Shaw. ...Read more
A memory of Walton in 1971 by
Early Years
I was born in 1967 in Tipton. I lived close to Victoria Park and have fond memories of sitting on the witch's hat swing which when looking back was sooo dangerous but fun. The metalic slide, made slippy from greased bread wrapping ...Read more
A memory of Tipton in 1967
Captions
680 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.
A neatly manicured gravel driveway in front of the manor house in Fulbourn.
In the 12th century, Sandsend was recorded as having 53 tenants' cottages belonging to the lord of the manor. The area is known as Dunsley Bay, and Sandsend is really two villages.
The first bridge on this site was a toll bridge built on massive timber supports in 1835; it was financed by the lord of the manor, William Ponsonby.
Evesham Abbey held the Manor of Ombersley for several centuries until the Dissolution, its abbots often residing there. In the early 17th century it came into the possession of the Sandys family.
Beyond is the Old Manor, dating from the early 16th century. It contains 17th-century panelling which originally came from Devon.
The Lucy Baldwin hospital was built in the 1920s, and farmer Peter Pratt recalls that when the river was in flood he had to get the night shift nurses over to the Manor House Annexe - this never flooded
The stained glass window dates from that time as a memorial to the late lord of the manor and his wife.
Behind it is the old 17th-century manor house, now restored.
It was once a manor of the Bishop of Salisbury. Although this is Wiltshire, the design of these houses is very much Cheshire in style.
But the whole composition still sits comfortably on its more ancient foundations close by the old manor house.
St John's Church c1965 When the Domesday commissioners were doing their rounds in 1086, the most important royal manor in the area was at Unstone, which had its own church and a priest.
A pre-war motorcar of much character is parked outside 63 Manor Way on the corner of Chipstead Way, whilst a modern delivery van runs downhill towards Rectory Lane.
In the manor of Little Askrigg we find this road junction - if we go right, we reach Carperby (4 miles) and Leyburn (12 miles). Behind Woodburn House, left, was the village brewery.
Manor Road with its well-appointed suburban villas offered the Victorian and Edwardian idyll, an elegant and fashionable domicile for the early London commuter.
Here the village is seen from the churchyard, which adjoins a beautiful Jacobean manor house. The triangle with the phone box was once a grassy area where there were hustings at election times.
Much of England's social history can be explored by examining the manorial structure of villages such as Melcombe Bingham.
It boasts a fine barrel roof, a Norman font, the old stocks and a ruined effigy of the medieval lord of the manor, Sir Ralph de Blanchminster.
He was born in Woolsthorpe Manor, an early 17th-century house, in 1643; Woolsthorpe is a hamlet immediately north-west of the village.
The town is ancient, having been granted borough status in 1290 by the Lord of the Manor Hamon de Massey.
The architect who had planned Sir Walter Scott's home in the Scottish borders rebuilt Canford's manor in the 1820s.
In early days the royal manor of Lyndhurst was often granted to the queens of England. Henry III gave it to Eleanor of Castile, the wife of Edward I.
This castle was originally a fortified manor house built by Sir John de Broughton in 1306; battlements and a gatehouse were added by William de Wykeham in 1405.
The Manor House can be seen to the right. The centre of the town is starting to look spacious and elegant.
In the centre stands Hylton House, home of the last Lords of the Manor, later to become Seager House School, a girls' school evacuated from Hayling Island at the start of World War II, and then Moreton
Places (30)
Photos (1067)
Memories (726)
Books (0)
Maps (175)