Places
10 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
42 photos found. Showing results 241 to 42.
Maps
83 maps found.
Books
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Memories
783 memories found. Showing results 121 to 130.
Strone Youth Hostel
I have fond memories of Strone. My mother was the warden at the SYHA hostel at Strone which was Dunselma on the hill. Strone Primary was my first school. I remember the US floating docks and the protesters ...Read more
A memory of Strone in 1959 by
An Evacuee Remembers
A South Londoner, I was 12+ when WWII started in September 1939. I was evacuated with Wandsworth Central School to Farncombe, and remember sitting on the floor in a large hall waiting for someone to 'adopt' me. Eventually, I ...Read more
A memory of Farncombe in 1940 by
Early War Years
This is very much a shot in the dark. My parents, Jim & Eva Davidson, moved to Barnhurst in the late 1930s and lived in a maisonette, ground floor I believe. My father worked at the Woolwich Arsenal ordinance factory and I ...Read more
A memory of Barnehurst in 1940 by
The Century Cinema And Other Memories
My parents, brother and I moved to Loughton in 1959. Our next door neighbours (Mr & Mrs Angel) were already retired and called Loughton 'The Village'. My mum got a job working in the sweetshop next ...Read more
A memory of Loughton by
Plympton In The Blitz
My name is Robert Best. I was born June 24th. 1939 in Plymouth and evacuated to Princetown in 1941. My Mother, her parents and I moved to Plympton when I was 3 years old. I have clear memories of Princetown, of riding the train ...Read more
A memory of Plympton by
Muriel The Half Caste Girl
That's how most people outside of the Edith Brough Whickham home referred to me. My sister (Dorothy) and I were transferred from the South Shields home to the Whickham home when I was about 11 years old after I ran ...Read more
A memory of Whickham
Old Manafon Character.
Anybody remember my old uncle Nathaniel (Watkin) who used to live at the Green Cottage, the Green, Manafon? He was Church warden for many years, a real old Montgomeryshire character, fondly remembered even though he died in ...Read more
A memory of Manafon by
Frecknalls
My mother lived in Dunmow from 1932 until 1946 when she left to live in Edinburgh. My mother's name was Rosalind Frecknall and she and her family lived at The Close initially, then The Downs. Her father, Claud Frecknall, taught ...Read more
A memory of Great Dunmow in 1930
River Walk 1947(Ish)
My friend and I would take the bus from Hounslow bus station, and dressed in our Sunday best (50's style) go walking along the River Walk from the bridge. I have a photo of us taken by a street photograther who ...Read more
A memory of Richmond by
Thorne People
I visited Thorne a few years ago to attend a 90th birthday party with the Scutt family and lots of other people. The hospitality of all of those people that I met was second to none. The party was held in the Southfield Road Club and ...Read more
A memory of Thorne by
Captions
318 captions found. Showing results 289 to 312.
The entrance door remains in situ, but the stone mullion and transom windows have gone in favour of unattractive modern replacements; strangely, the bell-cote now resides in the garden of School House
The spacious northern end of the High Street, with its central water garden and carefully tended flowerbeds, marks the area where the market hall stood until 1853.
A half century after the era of Dickens there are still several places where the traveller can take refreshment: Webb's is advertising teas, next door is a tea garden, and beyond that yet another sign
Valley Gardens was a favourite place for a mild constitutional after taking the waters.
The grounds around it were transformed into fantastic gardens with temples, pleasure walks, lakes with islands and fountains, a maze, a grotto, groves and lawns.
An attractive garden borders the river in front of the Swan Hotel.
local limestone, with sash windows and an impressive multi-entranced facade, it had twenty bedrooms, central heating, private lock- up garages, a private lounge, a croquet lawn and a rose garden
Here we see landslipped Langmoor Gardens (left) before the building of retaining walls and amusement arcades.
Beyond are Langmoor Gardens and the Bay Private Hotel on Marine Parade.
On the left are the Floral Tea Gardens followed by the Pear Tree Inn, later Samuel Banger's potted shrimp paste factory.
In 1919, amid the pain and sadness after the First World War, the peo- ple of Clitheroe raised £15,000 to buy the Castle and its grounds, and a Garden of Remembrance was laid out.
This shows the heart of the Victorian holiday town, with the required esplanade and gardens for strolling.
When Hunsdon won the Hertfordshire Best Kept Village competition in 1960, the winner's sign was erected in the garden of the house next door.
He built the adjacent office in part of his garden (the white porch on the right).
Unaltered pairs of such houses do exist, but most have received the treatment meted out at the hands of the double-glazing salesman and the need to park that extra car in the front garden.
This is a central and popular spot for shoppers and office workers to sit and relax in the well-laid-out formal gardens.
Recently, extensive excavations in the garden revealed pottery and ceramics dating back to late Saxon times.
The grass area in the foreground of the photograph is now the Garden of Remembrance.
Another tea-room in South Street was French's Tea Gardens, which adjoined the Stone Roof Café.
Another tea-room in South Street was French's Tea Gardens, which adjoined the Stone Roof Café.
The National Westminster Bank (extreme right) is next door to a seed merchant, still an important trader in a country town before seeds were brightly packaged and sold by garden centres.
Box Hill School has become one of the dominant features of the village; it was erected by Edward Gardener in 1870, and was then named Dalewood.
The first and second floors provided a manager's residence for many years, which enjoyed a walled garden to the rear.
The gardens were laid out to a design by Gertrude Jekyll.
Places (10)
Photos (42)
Memories (783)
Books (0)
Maps (83)