Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Bracknell, Berkshire
- Chingford, Greater London
- Walthamstow, Greater London
- South Chingford, Greater London
- North Chingford, Greater London
- Leyton, Greater London
- Forest Row, Sussex
- Sandhurst, Berkshire
- Wellington College, Berkshire
- New Forest, Hampshire
- Savernake Forest, Wiltshire
- Ashdown Forest, Sussex
- Forest Hill, Greater London
- Binfield, Berkshire
- Little Sandhurst, Berkshire
- Forest Green, Surrey
- Easthampstead, Berkshire
- Leytonstone, Greater London
- Highams Park, Greater London
- St Leonard's Forest, Sussex
- Coed-y-Brenin Forest, Gwynedd
- Sutton-on-the-Forest, Yorkshire
- Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire
- Wyre Forest, Hereford & Worcester
- Hawthorn Hill, Berkshire
- Snaresbrook, Greater London
- Forest Hill, Oxfordshire
- Harmans Water, Berkshire
- Warfield, Berkshire
- Forest Gate, Greater London
- Chavey Down, Berkshire
- Hanworth, Berkshire
- Maiden's Green, Berkshire
- Newell Green, Berkshire
- Priestwood, Berkshire
- Winkfield, Berkshire
Photos
620 photos found. Showing results 161 to 180.
Maps
471 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
432 memories found. Showing results 81 to 90.
The Way We Were
In 1946 my family Mum, Dad,brother Alex and sisters Jenny and Kay moved into a requisitioned house in Hollybush Hill. The house was called Surinam and it was a beautiful old house with a sweeping staircase and cellars ...Read more
A memory of Wanstead by
Children's Convalescent Home Charnwood Forest 1949
I was three years old when I went to Charnwood Forest for four weeks to convalesce in late spring 1949. I was recovering from pleurisy and pneumonia. My parents didn't have a car so I was ...Read more
A memory of Woodhouse Eaves
My Worst Nightmare
Went here with my sister in 1978/9 was 8 yrs old I hated the place was made to stand out side of the dorm all night naked due to wetting the bed also got hit with a cane for talking cold baths having to scrub ...Read more
A memory of Fornethy Residential School
"Bre's Tree" Linslade Bedfordshire
I lost my wife on new years eve 2021 following three years of her illness with vascular dementia. No one really told me how things would progress with this dreadful illness and so I just tried my hardest to cram ...Read more
A memory of Linslade by
Walthamstow
I was born in Forest Road, Walthamstow, in 1927. My father was a councillor in the thirties, on the entertainments committee organising film star visits and concerts by the London Symphony Orchestra. He owned the ironmongers, ...Read more
A memory of Leytonstone in 1930
The Rosekillys Malton Colliery
My mother was Ellen Rosekilly, she was born at Malton Colliery in May 1906, she was one of a large family. Her brothers worked down the pit. One by one they left and moved on. My Aunt Louisa continued to live ...Read more
A memory of Malton in 1944 by
Fire Station Byfleet
My Grandfather Benjamin Thomas Neville was a Fireman here after the war. I recall going on long Sunday afternoon walks out past St. Mary's Church or Mill Lane and over to Wisley via the Pig and Whistle pub or Pyford at the ...Read more
A memory of Byfleet in 1940 by
Chesson's Coaches
Hello Patrick, I came across your reminiscences while looking for something else - as you do! I remember Tom Chesson and his coaches, was at school with Veronica Chesson, his grand daughter and also my best friend Jill Burgess. ...Read more
A memory of Withyham in 1961 by
The Hamoaze, Not Hamvaze!
When I lived in Plymouth as a child in the 50s and 60s I went to a primary school at Keyham, part of Devonport. The bus would drop me off near Camel`s Head Creek, which was part of The Hamoaze. In those days the water ...Read more
A memory of Devonport by
Growing Up In Aberkenfig
Growing up and the family - Part 1 My grandfather William Morgan Cockram (son of Lewis Cockram) and grandmother (Mary Cockram) (granny and grandpa Cockram) took over the ironmongers after the death of John Richards. ...Read more
A memory of Aberkenfig by
Captions
369 captions found. Showing results 193 to 216.
The Lydney Canal is just one mile long with one lock and the tidal doors seen here, but it was an important and busy port for the shipment of coal from mines in the Forest of Dean.
Little remains today of Shakespeare`s Forest of Arden, only isolated islands of woodland in a sea of agriculture. But the name lives on locally.
This entire area was once cloaked with trees: it was once part of a forest that extended for miles across the surrounding countryside.
This wooden bridge was built over the River Llugwy so that the miners living in the village of Pentre Du could get to the lead mines of the Gwydir Forest.
This is one of the numerous 'dens', or forest clearings, in this part of Kent.
It is reputed to be a likeness of King John, who hunted in nearby Mendip forest.
The Forge Valley is a delightful winding drive through the forest.
The White Hart and Foresters Cottages are on the left. John Bradley was once the landlord, also an undertaker who made his own coffins.
The fire station and its tower dominate the scene, with the ambulance station and complementary education buildings to the right.
There are plenty of oak trees, foxgloves and thatched cottages in this pretty New Forest village.
This elegant Georgian mansion, set within three acres, is surrounded by the 90,000 acres of the New Forest where ponies roam free. Rooms are priced from £45 upwards.
Pilley is one of six hamlets making up Boldre in the New Forest. The others are Bailey, Bull Hill, Portmore, Sandy Down, Walhampton, and Boldre itself.
There was once a royal hunting forest next to Whitewell, and that brought in the aristocracy of past times.
This centre had grown from the work of Norah Jacques at Forest Lodge Riding School in the late 1950s.
The area now called Ottershaw was once a royal hunting ground within Windsor Forest.
In between these two great rivers lies the Forest of Dean, of which Coleford is one of the principal towns.
Tourism in the New Forest is really a 20th-century phenomenon.
The corner shop at the junction of Terrace Road and Forest Road displays numerous advertisements, including those for Walls Ice Cream, Cadburys, Digger, and Turf.
One of the New Forest's most famous landmarks, Bucklers Hard was an important naval shipbuilding yard during the 18th century.
Half a mile from Lyndhurst and yet located within the parish lies the scattered hamlet of Emery Down, surrounded by peaceful forest glades and countryside.
The Victory Hall means that Mobberley's original place-name meaning 'the clearing in the forest where meetings are held' still holds true today.
Little remains today of Shakespeare's Forest of Arden, only isolated islands of woodland in a sea of agriculture. But the name lives on locally.
In medieval times, guards were posted to keep watch and to guide people from the nearby Forest of Galtres so as to protect them from the packs of wolves that roamed the area.
The cathedral also includes the tomb of King William Rufus, who was killed by an arrow in the nearby New Forest in 1100.
Places (97)
Photos (620)
Memories (432)
Books (0)
Maps (471)