Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!

Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.

Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.

During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards

Places

3 places found.

Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Photos

159 photos found. Showing results 241 to 159.

Maps

23 maps found.

Books

Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.

Memories

1,468 memories found. Showing results 121 to 130.

My Subsequent Visit 29.10.2008

My wife and I had pre-arranged to meet my sister and her entourage in the Fox and Hounds at midday yesterday. The long and winding lane from Eynsford became muddier and narrower with each passing mile and we ...Read more

A memory of Romney Street in 2008 by Peter Collihole

Mountain Ash

My mom would talk about Mountain Ash, she was born in Quakers Yard in 1929, my nan, she was born in Llanrug in 1904, name was Griffiths, later she became Mrs Jackson and lived at 3 Field St. I am so sorry that I can't find any of ...Read more

A memory of Mountain Ash by June Wood

1958 1964

My name is Steve Whitfield, we lived in Whitecroft (on the Crossroads) and that is where I grew up. Went most of my time to boarding school with my two brothers, dating back to the 1960s. My father was employed as Chief Accountant for ...Read more

A memory of Quernmore by First Name Last Name

Kingsbury Road Prefabs

We lived in the prefabs in Kingsbury Road from 1955 until 1961, when we moved to Maple Grove off Church Lane. I remember taking our pets to the PDSA van in the swimming pool car park, which was a 300 yard walk for us. As ...Read more

A memory of Kingsbury in 1958 by Peter Brown

The Railway Bridge

In this picture I can remember that on the left was W H Smith's, a bicycle shop and an Options on the corner of Colham Road. To the right between the two pubs many years earlier was Pat's Garage. In the picture we have the ...Read more

A memory of West Drayton in 1954 by Barry Hawgood

My Great Granny Barker

At the far end of photo number H183005a - on the right - is a white wall. Mr and Mrs Barker lived in a one room plus a tiny kitchen downstairs, two tiny rooms up, from the 1930s until my great-grandmother died in the ...Read more

A memory of Heighington in 1944 by First Name Last Name

Aspull Born And Bred

I was born in Bolton Road, Aspull. I started at St Elizabeth's School when I was four and a half. Didn't have far to travel - just cross the road (no cars then) and walk 10 yards and I was there. First day was with my gas-mask ...Read more

A memory of Aspull

High Street Longton In The 40s And 50s

Barbara Johnson's memories brought back some of my own from the High Street days. Those rows of shops Barbara describes provided all the locals with everything they needed. I remember going over the road from ...Read more

A memory of Longton in 1940 by Geoff Emery

Cornwell Church

This is a beautiful little church, well worth the walk to get to it. My great-great-great grandfather is buried in the church yard and I went there in 2004, with my mother when she came home for what was to be her last visit. She ...Read more

A memory of Cornwell by Carol Garcia

Childhood Days

I too have happy and sad memories of Thurnscoe. I started school in 1952 at Hill Infants. Mrs Cartlidge was our teacher. I still remember where I sat behind the door and being given a small blackboard and chalk on my first day ...Read more

A memory of Thurnscoe in 1952

Captions

442 captions found. Showing results 289 to 312.

Caption For Cavendish, The Green C1965

A house has since been built in the yard. To the right is the Grape Vine of c1520, with 20th-century pargetting. The White Horse, beyond, is 18th-century with a mansard roof.

Caption For Newton Green, 1907

is over an open common of 52 acres, with nine holes 2,750 yards in length'.

Caption For Aylesbury, The Old King's Head Hotel 1921

This view looks through the entrance towards the inn yard, all of which survives to this day.

Caption For Jarrow, Grange Road West C1955

The entire town was dependent on the yard, and when it went into liquidation in 1933 it left Jarrow with the highest unemployment rate in the country.

Caption For Gnosall, The Wharf And Tunnel C1955

In the end, the tunnel, which can be seen in the distance, was reduced in length to just over eighty yards.

Caption For Gnosall, Village 1899

In the end, the tunnel, which can be seen in the distance, was reduced in length to just over eighty yards.

Caption For Gnosall, The Wharf And Tunnel C1955

In the end, the tunnel, which can be seen in the distance, was reduced in length to just over eighty yards.

Caption For Willingdon, The Post Office C1950

Opposite the church is the Hoo, a large rambling house built in 1902.The Post Office proprietor was R F Brierley; alongside is the entrance to the builders' and decorators' yard, F J French & Sons

Caption For Abingdon, The Boat House 1890

Stevens's Boatyard on the east end of Nag's Head Island also incorporated the landing stage for the Crown and Thistle Hotel in Bridge Street, some hundred yards away from the river.

Caption For Grays, The Lightship C1955

It is remarkable that it still survives, albeit moved a hundred yards west to the other side of the Thurrock Yacht Club, where it continues to moulder gently on the beach.

Caption For Weymouth, 1898

The first steam-paddle driven vessels, the 'Ivanhoe' and 'Warspite', arrived in Weymouth as early as 1827.The ship pictured here is probably one of their successors, built by the famous Lairds yard

Caption For Oakham, Hawthorn Horse C1955

To the left is Kilburn Yard. From 1818-78 this was the prison, large enough to accommodate 96 prisoners, but it was little used; later it became stables.

Caption For Richmond, Market Place C1965

Below the second window of the building marked 'Restaurant' (the fifth building from the left) is the opening to Bank Yard, named after the Old Bank which occupied the building in 1792

Caption For Doncaster, Baxtergate 1903

At Hatfield it took five years to reach the Barnsley bed at 852 yards below the surface.

Caption For Rochdale, The Walk C1910

Walter Vavasour built the block of buildings forming the Walk in the early 1800s, partly on the site of the yard of Eagle Inn.

Caption For Barnstaple, From South Walk C1874

Beyond the bridge, the sailing ship mast on the left is as Westacott's shipbuilding yard; those on the right are tied up at Barnstaple Quay. A small transom-sterned barge is beached by the slipway.

Caption For Oakham, Northgate C1950

Nearby is Angel Yard; Barlow Road broke through here some years later.

Caption For Blisworth, High Street C1965

The tunnel is 3075 yards (2811 metres) long and was a considerable feat of engineering when it opened in 1805.

Caption For Wallasey, Docks C1965

From 1945, the number of people employed by the shipbuilding yards in Wallasey and Birkenhead declined and a number of associated industries closed.

Caption For Wakefield, The Bull Ring C1960

The dominant row of shops has been modernised, but the bus station (centre right), which opened on September 1952, has now been moved a hundred yards to the east.

Caption For Saffron Walden, Market Place 1932

The Poultry Sale Yard entrance on Market Hill is the wide doorway beyond the awning, right of centre.

Caption For London, The Strand 1890

It was said that there was 'somehow a greater lightness and gaiety' here than you would find a few hundred yards further where the city workers toiled 'with their hurried walk and preoccupied look'.

Caption For Whitby, Arguments Yard 1913

Here, in Arguments Yard, the house on the right is derelict, the stone stairs have seen better days and the outside toilet looks ready to collapse.

Caption For Elham, The Square C1960

The Square or old Market Place of Elham adjoins the church yard on the north side, and a weekly market was held here until the 18th century.