Places
19 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chalfont St Peter, Buckinghamshire
- St Peters, Kent
- Weasenham St Peter, Norfolk
- Burgh St Peter, Norfolk
- Walpole St Peter, Norfolk
- Ampney St Peter, Gloucestershire
- St Peter's, Gloucestershire
- Saltfleetby St Peter, Lincolnshire
- St Peter's, Tyne and Wear
- Thorpe St Peter, Lincolnshire
- Toynton St Peter, Lincolnshire
- Ayot St Peter, Hertfordshire
- Carleton St Peter, Norfolk
- Charlton St Peter, Wiltshire
- Fugglestone St Peter, Wiltshire
- Rockland St Peter, Norfolk
- Wiggenhall St Peter, Norfolk
- St Peter South Elmham, Suffolk
- St Peter The Great, Hereford & Worcester
Photos
1,317 photos found. Showing results 141 to 160.
Maps
97 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
434 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.
The Day We Set Earith On Fire
Well . . . not all of it! My dad was enlisted USAF stationed at Alconbury 1959-1960 and he found us a place on High Street that we shared with a number of other people. I believe it was one of the first three ...Read more
A memory of Earith in 1960 by
My Early Years In Brynteg
I was born at 1 Cilcain Grove, Brynteg in 1935 to Peter Price Davies and Kitty Davies with my brother David and sister Joan. I went to the junior and secondary schools before going on to the Wrexham Technical ...Read more
A memory of Brynteg in 1940 by
Small Timber Cottage; Dicks Mount, Burgh St Peter
Location: Burgh St Peter, Beccles: My sister and brother-in-law (Ronald and Shirley Miller), owned a small timber cottage above the dyke on Dicks Mount during 1960-1970's. It was a charming one or ...Read more
A memory of Beccles in 1966 by
Name Of
This picture is of St Peter-ad-Vincula (St Peter in chains) at Bottesford, Scunthorpe, North Lincolnshire. One of only a few in the country with this dedication another being in The Tower of London. 13th century Early English style and ...Read more
A memory of Scunthorpe by
Entertainment In The 1950''''''''s
Uxbridge was blessed with 3 cinemas; The Odeon, the Regal and the Savoy (the oldest of the three it stood on the corner of Vine St and the High St). The Odeon, I think, had the biggest productions as it had a wider ...Read more
A memory of Uxbridge by
Wallsend Central
Central Girls school Wallsend was operational during the ten years I was there from 1941. It was one of three large units that were respectively, The Infants, Boys, and Girls. We were segregated once we survived the 'Infant's, ...Read more
A memory of Wallsend in 1951 by
Memories Of St Peters And Broadstairs
I was born at 19 Church St, St Peters, where my grandfather owned the butchers shop. My first memory is of playing on the lino floor just inside the front door. My father, who served in the RAF during the ...Read more
A memory of Broadstairs in 1950 by
I Lived In 1 Rockcliffe View Carlin How
I lived in 1 Rockcliffe View Carlin How, from about 1946 to 1952, then my father retired and we then moved to Loftus. My father was Jim Conway the Police Constable. I went to Skinningrove Senior School, ...Read more
A memory of Carlin How in 1946 by
Birley St School
Alan Clapworthy, Harold Strictland, Mike Walsh, Peter Keogh, Peter Brown, David Barnes, all good mates. Markam St, St Ancoats Club, the red wreck. Hung out outside Co op on St Silas St, lass called Jacqeline - the many freezing nights we spent there.
A memory of Ardwick by
Greenbrow.
Hi Chris. Just loved reading your memories about Mill Brook. I lived at 171 Greenbrow opposite the 'Newall'.Remember everything - Dr. Devlin, Taggarts and Southersts newsagents, and Knob HalI was scary.Started at St Peters in 1955 and ...Read more
A memory of Newall Green by
Captions
388 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.
These days it is a private house once more. Next door is the Catholic church of St Peter and St Paul. The foundation stone was laid by Miss Beach of Oakley Hall on 14 June 1886.
Standing beyond the market area of High Town, near to the Shire Hall, St Peter's is the civic church of Hereford.
Music lovers come to visit the grave of the composer Frederick Delius, who is buried in St Peter's churchyard.
The tower in the background is of the church of St Peter in Trusthorpe village.
Today St Peter's Square is home to several coffee shops as well as the new Emsworth library, a butcher's, and a baker's that makes delicious cheesecakes.
Taken from the west edge of St Peter's Green, this view looks north up the long avenue towards Bedford Park. This is an early view, with the lime trees little over ten years old.
St Peter's Church, seen here from the churchyard and looking towards the village green, was rebuilt in 1718 on the site of an earlier church.
The parish church of St Peter and St Paul was attached to a nunnery founded by the abbot of Ramsey in c1006 and dissolved in 1537.
Cromer's lifeboat has a reputation which goes far beyond its sphere of operation on the North Norfolk coast.
This old view of St Osyths Lane includes the beautiful 14th-century spire of St Peter's Church in the distance, beyond the market place.
St Peter's Church was 'pulled down' in 1560, and this building was built in 1863.
North Hill climbs towards High Street, just beyond St Peter's church tower seen in the distance.
The church of St Peter, in North Street, has a superb Norman doorway, possibly the best in the county (so the experts say), and the church has further Norman architecture inside.
The tower in the background is of the church of St Peter in Trusthorpe village.
Old St Peter's 12th-century church hides behind the inn.
St Peter's Church has never had a steeple: in this instance, the word steeple derives from the 13th-century word 'stepel', meaning an unfortified tower, which the church does have.
George Smith's Town Hall of 1830, which with its Ionic columns and Tuscan pillars bears a remarkable resemblance to the Corn Exchange at Bishop's Stortford and dominates St Peter's Street and its avenue
St Peter's was consecrated in 1318 by Bishop Stapleton.
A close-up of the cottages nestling by the side of the River Medway, with St Peter's Church in the background.
Outside St Peter's Church tower a crowd concentrates on the Punch and Judy show. There is a group of carriages parked to the left.
Looking down Gloucester Street, this view shows St Peter's in the distance. This 15th-century church is noted for its grotesque gargoyles. The interior was substantially renovated in 1872.
The present building is later; it perhaps dates from 1904, when the name was shortened. It closed in 1974, and is now known as Marsh House.
The church has a fine Horsham stone roof and a large brass on the floor of the nave to Thomas Noland, Prior of the Cluniac St Pancras at Lewes, who died in 1433.
The church of St Peter and St Paul, another of the marshland churches, is located by the side of the A158 main road to Skegness - during the summer this is a very busy road indeed.
Places (19)
Photos (1317)
Memories (434)
Books (0)
Maps (97)