Places
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Maps
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Memories
26 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Chelmsford, New London Road 1892.
This is a view taken from the bottom of London Road, near to the High Street. It has now changed beyond all recognition. However there is one building which has not changed in appeareance one bit, and still ...Read more
A memory of Chelmsford by
Doodlebug In Central Avenue
I lived at 6 Camborne Road, Welling with my mother Hermine Wright and my grandparents Fred and Elsie Wright from 1943 to 1948. I attended East Wickham Infants School, where my teacher was Miss Sharp. I think the year must ...Read more
A memory of Welling by
The "White Hart Inn" Towngate
My husband's ancestors John & Ann Archer were Innkeeper's of this Inn in Bradwell in the 1850's. They lived here until their deaths in 1879 & are buried in St.Barnabus Churchyard. They both originally came ...Read more
A memory of Bradwell by
Whybrows Of Bradwell
I am related to the Whybrow/Wybrow/Whybrew/Whybra family of Bradwell-juxta-Coggeshall. I know of two or three inter-related strains of this Bradwell family in the C19 but I have an Abraham (born 1811 in Bradwell) and Mary ...Read more
A memory of Braintree by
Before They Put Numbers On The Years!
Gosh, I am so old, I remember the time that the trams (696 and 698) were changed for electric trolley buses of the same numbers. Does anyone but me remember the horse trough beside the clock tower?. before the ...Read more
A memory of Bexleyheath by
My Family
The Mansbridges were my great grandparents. My grandmother, Elizabeth M Card is buried in the church yard and lived for many many years in the thatched cottage just outside the church gates. I spent many holidays there as I only lived ...Read more
A memory of Combrook by
The White Hart Inn
My Gt.Gt.Grandparents ran this Inn in Bradwell during the 1870's. Their names were John & Ann Archer. They originally came from West Yorkshire in a place called Kirkburton. John & Ann had a great many children who ...Read more
A memory of Bradwell in 1870 by
Grandmother
I have little information, other than my paternal Grandmother was the eldest of 16 children born in Bradwell approximately at this time, or much earlier, possibly 1875 onwards. Her maiden name was Elizabeth Cook. A cousin of ...Read more
A memory of Bradwell in 1890 by
Where The Name Heelands Orginated
I was told a tale by Mrs Lester of Bradwell Village that one day the lord of Bradwell Manor had visitors from Scotland staying, and early one morning as they looked out of their bedroom window and looked across ...Read more
A memory of Heelands in 1890 by
The 40s In Lattimore Road
No photographs but I don't need them! So many happy memories of our family living in Lattimore Road...Wellers, Days, The Labour Exchange, Boxes, Fisher & Knights and Lattimore Hall. We had it all! Despite a war and ...Read more
A memory of St Albans in 1940 by
Captions
11 captions found. Showing results 1 to 11.
Built around 1750, Stonebridgehouse Farmhouse is situated close to the site of the original stone bridge built by the monks from Bradwell Abbey c1350.
Bradwell is built on the steep slopes of Bradwell Dale, and the Steps are an easy way for pedestrians to get from the lower to the upper part of the village.
Built around 1750, Stonebridgehouse Farmhouse is situated close to the site of the original stone bridge built by the monks from Bradwell Abbey c1350.
Bradwell is a bustling little former lead mining village on the south side of the Hope Valley in north Derbyshire.
This is the view down Smithy Lane, Bradwell, looking towards the green escarpment of Bradwell Edge in the background.
This view of the then new dual carriageway section of the A367 Radstock road, Wells Way, as it drops down from Odd Down towards the city, seems a curious subject for a photograph, but in those far-off
Norfolk folk were sailing on the winding, slow-flowing rivers and angling and wild fowling on the Broads well before holidaymakers from outside the area discovered its virtues in the late 1870s.
This churchyard stands at the top of Thundersley Church Road, well removed from the bustle of the town below.
Bradwell is one of a group of villages just south of Great Yarmouth which were in Suffolk until boundary changes of 1974 brought them into Norfolk.
This view across Bradwell shows the prominent chimney of the Hope Valley Cement Works at Hope, a valuable source of employment for local people.
Likewise, Blecca had his field or 'lea' in modern Bletchley, Sigewine his place or 'tun' in Simpson, and Walla his 'tun' in Walton; and Brede found a most convenient 'wella' of water at Bradwell