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347 memories found. Showing results 121 to 130.
Great Childhood Memories
I remember living in Middleton on Sea when I was between the ages of eight and 11 in the early 60’s and I went to Edward Bryant school in Bognor. We lived in a road called North Avenue East and I just remember the ...Read more
A memory of Middleton-on-Sea by
Greenham's The Butchers & Brewer's The Grocers
In 1954, as a 17 year old cashier bookkeeper, I started work for Mr Greenham, whose butcher's shop was near the top of Broad Street. Some years later (in 1958), I went to work at Brewer's, the ...Read more
A memory of Lyme Regis in 1954 by
Greenwich In The 1940s And 1950s
I was born, during the Battle of Britain, at 8, Roan Street. Our back yard bordered St Alfege's churchyard. The house is not there any more because it had to be pulled down after the war. We had several 'near-hits' ...Read more
A memory of Greenwich by
Growing Up As A Boy In Stubbins
I was born at 12 Ashwood Avenue on Peel Brow estate Ramsbottom in 1952. My father after being demobbed from the eighth army in 1945 had always and continued to work in cotton mills. In 1960 ...Read more
A memory of Stubbins by
Growing Up At Coombe Place
My family and I moved to a bungalow at Coombe Place in 1960. My father, Walter Motley, took up the post of farm manager on this 100 acre dairy farm with a herd of Jersey cattle. Coombe Place is set on the side of the South ...Read more
A memory of Offham in 1960 by
Growing Up In Stanford Le Hope And Corringham 1960 To 1976
When I was born in Chelmsford Hospital, my family were living in a house in Corringham Road, Stanford-le-Hope but my first memories are of 66 Billet Lane. Right opposite what was ...Read more
A memory of Stanford-le-Hope by
Ham, Sweet Ham!
I moved to Ham in 1959 from Kew and left in 1984 after coming back from a short spell of living abroad with work. I went to St. Andrew's school (now St. Matthias' church) then, St Richards with St Andrews on Ashburnham Rd. We lived in ...Read more
A memory of Ham in 1965 by
Hanworth Terrace Or Bell Alley As Locals Called It And Bell Road
I remember the walkway between Whitton Road and Hanworth road which ended opposite Bell Road. There was a greengrocer stall about halfway along the alley, i was often sent up to get ...Read more
A memory of Hounslow by
Happy Days In Tre Ifor Llwydcoed
My grandfather William Forey and gran Nellie, moved to Tre Ifor, when they demolished Dare Street in Aberdare. I think it was around the 1930s or 40s. The whole street moved to these new houses, and most stayed ...Read more
A memory of Llwydcoed in 1950 by
Happy Times
I WAS BROUGHT UP IN BROAD HINTON AND LIVED AT 14 THE CROFT ITS A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE. I HAVE SO MANY HAPPY MEMORIES FROM WHEN I WAS YOUNG PLAYING ON THE TOP BANK.
A memory of Broad Hinton by
Captions
374 captions found. Showing results 289 to 312.
These women players are at a considerable disadvantage with their long, billowing dresses and broad-brimmed headgear.
The view is northwards to the Old Boathouse in the Square, and the Assembly Rooms beside Bell Cliff at the bottom of Broad Street, which were pulled down in 1928.
While the neighbouring resort of Margate had been attracting hordes of trippers from London from 1753 onwards, Westgate remained a more sedate and favoured place for families throughout the late
This broad open space at the heart of the city is a kaleidoscope of noise and colour on market day.
The broad street of the village, with its grass verges, is lined with brick and weatherboarded houses.
The main shopping areas of Broad Street and Church Street have not changed too much in character since the camera clicked on this scene.
One of the most frequently-painted sites on the Broads was the old Acle Bridge with its three arches, which we see here.
The town of Bodiam is dominated by one of the most picturesque castles in England, set within a broad moat filled with golden carp.
In the broad High Street old inns, houses, small shops and buildings in honey-coloured local stone jostle in a medley of complementary styles.
The Beach House Temperance Hotel (to the right in photograph No 44204) is apparent on the left in this view of the broad Esplanade, looking towards the centre of the town.
There is a fine church, noted for its Decorated Gothic chancel, and a broad main street, once the market place.
These fishwives have been shrimping with nets on the sands and filling the baskets they carry on their backs.
These fishwives have been shrimping with nets on the sands and filling the baskets they carry on their backs.
The village of Hampstead Norris nestles in a shallow valley, the buildings dominated by the short broad tower of St Mary's church in the background.
The capital of the Broads is Wroxham which is just across the bridge.
Here we see the broad market place, with its pleasing facades of 17th- and 18th-century slate-roofed buildings.
A place familiar to all train travellers through Devon, Dawlish nestles across the sides of a broad combe, with the railway line protecting the town from the sea.
In 1800, Aberaeron was little more than a farm and inn by the main coast road where a bridge crossed the Aeron.
This broad expanse of the old Portsmouth Road is lined with pollarded trees.
The Beach House Temperance Hotel (to the right in photograph No 44204) is apparent on the left in this view of the broad Esplanade, looking towards the centre of the town.
This broad parade, named after Queen Victoria, runs along the East Cliff in front of Wellington Crescent and the lawns.
Stanhill is a small community on one of the B-roads between Oswaldtwistle and Blackburn.
Originally a simple Norman construction, it was enlarged many times and given a neo-Gothic interior after the War, with broad aisles.
This broad open space is a kaleidoscope of noise and colour on market day.
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