Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Melrose, Borders
- Kelso, Borders
- Jedburgh, Borders
- Innerleithen, Borders
- Hawick, Borders
- Peebles, Borders
- Eyemouth, Borders
- Coldstream, Borders
- Lauder, Borders
- Galashiels, Borders
- Duns, Borders
- Selkirk, Borders
- Newcastleton, Borders
- Swinton, Borders
- St Abbs, Borders
- Dryburgh, Borders
- Hermitage, Borders
- Ancrum, Borders
- St Boswells, Borders
- Town Yetholm, Borders
- Abbotsford, Borders
- Newstead, Borders (near Melrose)
- Nisbet, Borders
- Smailholm, Borders
- Broughton, Borders
- Denholm, Borders
- Coldingham, Borders
- West Linton, Borders
- Kirk Yetholm, Borders
- Langshaw, Borders
- Gordon, Borders
- Border, Cumbria
- Blyth Bridge, Borders
- Burnmouth, Borders
- Balmoral, Borders
- Cockburnspath, Borders
Photos
524 photos found. Showing results 221 to 240.
Maps
795 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
288 memories found. Showing results 111 to 120.
Once An Idyllic Dorset Village.
Since about the 1960s, Child Okeford became a totally different community from the one I first got to know in the early 1930's. The Watts (Harry and Dorothy) had farmed out of Laurel Farm for many decades and ...Read more
A memory of Child Okeford in 1930 by
On The Farm
This is a memory of about 1960. I had left the pit and started work on Lowrisons farm in Westerhope, there were two houses, one was at the bottom of West Avenue next to the park. This is where John Lowrison lived with his sister Betty, ...Read more
A memory of Newburn in 1960 by
Old House Next To The Waveney
There used to be an old house next to the River Waveney, which was demolished sometime in the 1970s to make way for a housing estate. I used to play in the gardens, and remember an old pond outside surrounded with ...Read more
A memory of Scole in 1974 by
Note To Elaine
Goodaye Elaine, and greetings from the old country. There's a book about the order called "We agreed to be different" which has been posted on the web, and mentions your old school on P36. This story about the nuns has been ...Read more
A memory of Pantasaph by
Not Humberside
Humberside was created from 1 April 1974 and lasted to 1 Apr 1996. Kingston-upon-Hull is Yorkshire and not Humberside. Note from the Editor: Many thanks for your comment. I do understand your frustration, however, ...Read more
A memory of Kingston upon Hull
New Inn Eversley/Finchampstead Border
My great grandfather,Henry Berriss was publican of the New Inn (on the Eversley/Finchampstead border) now known as the Tally Ho. I would be very interested to hear from anyone with stories of their family ...Read more
A memory of Eversley in 1910 by
My Three Years At Reedham
I recall walking past the gate-house with my mother on a Tuesday afternoon in March 1950. I was to start my lustrous career there for a period of three years, leaving in March 1953. Starting there was an real shock to the ...Read more
A memory of Purley in 1950 by
My Teenage Memories....
From 1959 to 1973 I lived at Tooting Junction. '59-69 in Glasford Street opposite the police station, then when I got married in 1969 I moved one whole road away in Renmuir Street! Many local people may remember our big, black ...Read more
A memory of Tooting in 1963 by
My Sister And I Were Boarders At Cedar House School In St Neots In 1968 Before It Merged With Morcott Hall School, Rutland
My sister and I were boarders at Cedar House School,St Neots in 1968 before it merged with Morcott Hall School in Rutland. Fitzy ...Read more
A memory of St Neots by
Captions
290 captions found. Showing results 265 to 288.
It grew from the humble beginnings of a bathing shelter on the border of North Meols into the sizeable conurbation depicted here.
Up to the southern border of Royston, the A10 follows the route of the Roman Ermine Street, but close to the market Ermine Street becomes the Old North Road (which was the A14 and is now the A1198) taking
The Icknield Way was a pre-Roman, Iron Age trading route running along the northern border of Hertfordshire. At Baldock it formed the length of White Horse Street and Hitchin Street.
Knighton is so close to the border that its railway station and hotel sit in England.
However, he is today best remembered for the distinctive style of the houses he designed along the Haywards Heath and Lindfield borders.
It was bordered by trees and shrubs, with clumps of trees and gravel paths. A pond was enlarged and stocked with fish from the ornamental lake at Woodcote Park.
The village stands on the border with the neighbouring county of Sussex. It occupies rising ground and offers fine views across the Weald.
This cluster of sparse conifers in Ampthill Park borders an entrance to the Cheshire Home for the Disabled that occupies a house built in 1686-88 for the Dowager Countess of Ailesbury and Elgin.
The River Lagan flows within a few miles of the huge Lough Neagh, which is bordered by four Ulster counties; a lot of work was done to make the river able to take barges, with a link to the lough.
The redevelopment of Botchergate is just the latest stage in the long-term rebirth of the great border city, continuing the process begun in the late 20th century.
The college admitted both boarders and town boys, and somewhat uniquely for the period, regarded them all with equal status.
In 1960 it became an independent prep school for day pupils and boarders.
Hollybush Lane lies in the southern part of the Garden City, and its tree-lined footpath and grassy triangular area typify Ebenezer Howard's vision of a ordered village atmosphere.
In 1960 it became an independent prep school for day pupils and boarders.
They included accommodation for twenty to thirty boarders, as well as a lecture room, large hall and classrooms.
Boldre (pronounced Bolder) church stands apart from its village and dates back to the time of the Norman kings.
Miss Ellinor Gabriel bought the house in 1873 for the first St Mary's School, founded by Canon John Duncan, and started with six day girls and three boarders.
The college opened in 1868, taking 80 boarders and 120 day boys, not all Methodists. It soon became the largest school in Belfast.
Today it is an independent co-educational school with 480 pupils, of whom 300 are boarders.
In the lower right-hand corner of the photograph, and on the near side of the road, the edge of the small lake known as Bolder Mere can be seen.
Now known as Truro School, the college was founded on the hill overlooking the city 10 years before this photograph was taken, 'affording a thorough English education at a moderate cost' for up to 120 boarders
It could take boarders, and must have been intended for the middle classes. The first School building was constructed not too far from the church in what was to become Academy Street.
St Mary's churchyard contains the original Bolder Stone. The lychgate was erected in 1897 to mark Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.
Here we see the south front of the grammar school; it is now Bedford School, and from the start took boarders as well as day boys.
Places (421)
Photos (524)
Memories (288)
Books (0)
Maps (795)