Places
Sorry, no places were found that related to your search.
Photos
5 photos found. Showing results 221 to 5.
Maps
83 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 111 to 120.
Some Historical Facts Of The Plumbs In Barroby
The newspaper published at Grantham in England, the original home of the ancestors of the well known Plumb and Parker families of Mills, Pottawattamie, Cass and Shelby Counties, recently carried a ...Read more
A memory of Barrowby by
My Link To Cherry Willingham
I feel connected through family,whom I have never met. My plan to visit and connect in person will depend on whether I can trace my relative. Does anyone recall Stan (Clark?) and his daughter Linda? Linda's ...Read more
A memory of Cherry Willingham by
I960s Mods And Northern Soul In Crowd In Bury
In the late 1960's I was a schoolgirl at the Derby School. When I began to be independent and join a tribe I chose the Northern Soul gang and sometimes I used to go to All Nighters, with my boyfriend and ...Read more
A memory of Bury
Warmfield A Forgotten Village
I have lived in the parish of Warmfield-cum-Heath practically all my life,and attended the now very 'dilapidated' local school. I still live in the parish, and have very fond memories of Warmfield. Much has ...Read more
A memory of Warmfield by
Wartime And Later
My mum and I were evacuated to Ingleton during WWII from Wallasey in the Wirral, after we had been bombed out. We lived at 129 New Village and when we went back to Wallasey after the end of the war, my Grandparents, Mr and Mrs ...Read more
A memory of Ingleton by
Good Old School Days !!!
I started Walker R C in the 1950's and remember my wonderful teacher called Miss Morgan - she was so sweet and kind. I had very long hair and she would often bring in lovely ribbons for me, I was very shy and she was so very ...Read more
A memory of Byker
My Childhood In The 50s And 60s
My mother, was born in Cwmaman as were a large number of my maternal family. I used to visit my aunts in Byron Street. You may remember them for running the local shop in the 50's - Maggie Evans, and her sisters ...Read more
A memory of Cwmaman by
Grand Hotel, Littlestone, 1963
I remember attending my aunt's 21st Birthday Party at the Grand Hotel in 1963. I was 3 years old. They had strung a fishing net from the ceiling of the ballroom and filled it with balloons. Every now and ...Read more
A memory of Littlestone-on-Sea by
Morris Family The Gristmill Whitebrook
My father Eddie Morris was last of of 7 children who lived in the Gristmill. Even aged 70, he was still hugged & referred to as Baby Brother. (Ron, Tom, Jack, Jim, Trudy, Grace, Eddie). Story is that ...Read more
A memory of Whitebrook by
Memories Of Barmouth Road Sw18
Hi, I grew up in Barmouth Road, Wandsworth SW18 I was born in 1961 (so nearly 50!!). We lived in a lovley big house on the corner of Barmouth Road/Cader Road, the road has changed so much, it used to have lots of ...Read more
A memory of Wandsworth by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 265 to 288.
The attractive village of Bromham is now bypassed, so the old bridge over the Great Ouse is mercifully much quieter than it was a few years ago.
We have a good view of the striking and dramatic west front with its trio of huge arches, richly moulded and recessed into the façade, dating from c1220.
Constructed in 1826, and with a single arched span of a hundred and seventy six feet, it was considered an engineering marvel at the time of its completion.
It is hard to believe that the arched bridge, built in 1797 by John Carr of York, used to carry all the main Great North road traffic.
These days, the building houses McDonald's fast food restaurant, who gave the site a much-needed facelift.
Its walls are hidden beneath some rather tatty rendering, but are almost certainly made of granite, which can be seen in the arch below the gable, and in the horse trough in which the little boy
The chancel arch in the church sports an enormous and very striking mosaic, put up in 1905 in memory of the churchwarden`s wife, and made by the craftsmen who had worked on St Paul`s Cathedral.
The viaduct is 105ft high, with its 8 arches each having a span of 30ft. The Spodden flows underneath with its mill stream, which formerly served `Th` Owd Mill i` th` Thrutch`.
The church has a Norman nave and chancel, with Norman mouldings to the south door and chancel arch. The porch is Tudor.
Pooley Hall was built by Thomas Cockayne between 1506 and 1509 on the site of a much older house.
Eamont Bridge, just south of Penrith on the A6, takes its name from this splendid three-arched bridge across the River Eamont.
Overlooking the square is an arched gatehouse, built in the 14th century as a defence against Scottish raiders.
The central stream maintains the medieval character whilst the arched lamp holder was one of several erected in the 1890s.
The stonework arches belong to the 1754 replacement for St Lawrence's Bridge; it dated from 1362, and even had a chapel to St Lawrence halfway across.
The toll bridge (cars currently 30p) is just out of picture to the left; indeed, the weir goes beneath its northern arches. Built in 1872, the bridge replaced an old ferry.
The sumptuous decorations were prepared by several fine artists over a much longer period of time.
The church of St John and St Giles is a largely 12th-century structure with a much-maligned wooden bell-tower.
The doorway is one of the oldest in Cheshire, and is famous for the zigzag patterns and beaked heads carved on the arch.
Whalley's viaduct is the longest in Britain, its 49 arches carrying the railway high above the River Calder.
This picture shows the remains of the nave, noted for its sturdy-looking round pillars that support a series of Norman arches.
The Guildhall was built in 1574 as a market hall; it was rebuilt in 1814, except for the splendid timber arches on which it rests, and which serve as shelter for the stall-holders and their customers.
It dates from Norman times, but parts of an older arch, containing some Roman bricks, may be seen in the nave. The large west tower was built in the late 15th century. Southend
Spanning the street are a pair of open decorative iron arches on which are hung the town lamps. On the left is a formidable display of boots and shoes cascading over the shop facia.
The interior quadrangular courtyard is entered from College Street through an arched gateway. Above the entrance is a stone figure of St William (the Archbishop of York) who died in 1154.
Places (0)
Photos (5)
Memories (1127)
Books (0)
Maps (83)