Places
6 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
2,208 photos found. Showing results 1,401 to 1,420.
Maps
41 maps found.
Books
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Memories
2,827 memories found. Showing results 701 to 710.
Ryders Folklore
These cottages are now known as Ryders, but it appears that in Edwardian times the place (or maybe this corner) may also have been known as "Seven Trees Well": I have a postcard with this picture on it sent on 7th May 1906 to ...Read more
A memory of Okewood Hill in 1900 by
Sam Cook The Blacksmith
I can remember Sam the blacksmith. I would stand and watch him at work in the forge. He had lost an arm (presumably in the war) and he had different attachment false arms which he would change to provide the tool he ...Read more
A memory of Dalham in 1955 by
Mr Mrsgrabham
Thlocal shop was owned by my grandmother, Mrs Grabham, my father was brought up there, and had a very happy childhood. We used to visit when I was a child and I loved it. Sadly the shop does not exist any more, but it still a ...Read more
A memory of Chipstable by
Childhood
I remember spending the first twelve years of my life in Haltwick, we lived in Sunnny Side Cottage, my brother and I would go down past the pub to get water from the well and we would play in the woods and fields. We moved to Dane End ...Read more
A memory of Dane End in 1946 by
Broughton Astley C Of E Primary School
Born in Mill Lane in Broughton Astley on 3rd May 1926, I started school at B/Astley C of Primary in 1931 as a five year old. We would be 'called to school' by the ringing of the bell housed in the ...Read more
A memory of Broughton Astley in 1930 by
The Shop On Cobham Tilt
My father Clive Impey,was demobbed from the forces in 1946 and at the time the shop was a shoe repair shop. He converted it to a greengrocers shop and during the next few years it became a general store. My mother Jocelyn ...Read more
A memory of Cobham by
Nurse Hampton
On August 13, 1961 I took up residence as a student nurse in Lindsay Smith House across from the hospital. It was the day the Berlin wall went up, and, as I recall, the day before the grouse shooting season began. I was 19 ...Read more
A memory of Virginia Water in 1961 by
Childhood
I was born at Peartree Cottage which was half way down the high street. For a young boy growing up the war was one big adventure. The fire station was opposite our house and they made me some really great wooden toys. As ...Read more
A memory of Minster in 1930 by
Vintage
These memories really are 1944 to about 1953. The corner shop by the church was a favourite as they used to sell home made toffee when sweets were on ration. One character I can still see was Mr White the baker being taken ...Read more
A memory of Minster in 1944 by
Walsh Manor
Reading past memories of Walsh Manor brings back memories of mine. At about 1937 we moved in to the cottage at the manor as my grand parents part-ran the manor with a Mr Lindred. The manor then was a home for severely disabled and ...Read more
A memory of Crowborough in 1940 by
Captions
2,010 captions found. Showing results 1,681 to 1,704.
The roadside house (Newby Bridge House), the big tree and the cottages are virtually unchanged since 1940, but the motor bike and sidecar (centre) are very much of the 1930s.
The cottages fronting the field now look out onto houses built on the field. Francis Frith's Sussex A Century Ago
The railings in the foreground guard the chalk stream as it heads east into the town to become the River Chess, while the cottages beyond had just been rebuilt, replacing ramshackle older ones
In this view the bellcote of the church, built in 1846 by James Deason in preparation for parish status and costing £1,700, can be seen behind the cottages.
Boat building was carried on, and sailcloth was made in cottages equipped with handlooms.
There is a pleasing lack of uniformity about the facades and rooflines of the buildings in the High Street, some of which are small cottages, and others grand town houses.
Acacia Cottage is still the first house on the right. This is still Main Road.
Once the railways arrived, trade on the river declined; today the centre lock has been removed, and the lock keeper's cottage is forlorn and empty.
This view east of the 1897 church shows the cottages and the post office, now closed; the telephone box has been removed and the post office converted to a house, called unsurprisingly The
The gardens and cottages of this rural set piece of thatch and village green today are neat and tidy.
The pretty village of Shackleford, west of Godalming, has a mixture of houses in different styles, as evidenced here by the creeper-clad building on the right, the tall-chimneyed cottages with their neatly
Its quaint, colour-washed cottages complement the easy access to the beach. It is hard to imagine that the harbour was mainly used for the export of anthracite and coal.
The cottages on the left were originally private dwellings, but for many years they have been incorporated into the hotel. On the right, adjoining the hotel, is the original cow byre.
This scene has changed little: the post office has now expanded to take in the neighbouring shop, but the cottages and barns remain.
The last view in the book looks south-east along the High Street past the long terrace of 1850s cottages on the left. Market Square is in the far distance.
Sydney Carter's butcher's shop occupied the cottage on the left from about 1914 to 1946.
The 19th-century lock keeper's cottage with the hipped roof was rebuilt by the Thames Conservancy in 1928.
Here we see one of Formby's older properties, a fine example of the type of cottage that was once common to this part of the coast.
In the distance is the Five Arrows Hotel; the five arrows symbolise the five Rothschild brothers - the badge is seen on houses and cottages all over central Buckinghamshire.
The old market booths, which backed on to the churchyard, were later converted into cottages and demolished in the 1940s.
Here we see a row of classic stone-built thatched cottages, in the characteristic vernacular style.
There was once an old village of Overstone near to the grandiose main mansion, but this was moved in 1821 and estate cottages built along the boundary.
A lace maker works at a floral sprig of Honiton lace outside her cottage door at Beer in South Devon.
Villagers still use donkeys and sleds to carry goods to and from their cottages and the tiny harbour far below.
Places (6)
Photos (2208)
Memories (2827)
Books (0)
Maps (41)