Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chatsworth House, Derbyshire
- Osborne House, Isle of Wight
- Brambletye House, Sussex
- Ickworth House, Suffolk
- Kingston Lacy House, Dorset
- Boscobel House, Shropshire
- Preshute House, Wiltshire
- Bolton Houses, Lancashire
- Brick Houses, Yorkshire
- Quaking Houses, Durham
- Water Houses, Yorkshire
- Bottom House, Staffordshire
- Church Houses, Yorkshire
- High Houses, Essex
- Dye House, Northumberland
- Flush House, Yorkshire
- Halfway House, Shropshire
- Halfway Houses, Kent
- Mite Houses, Cumbria
- Lyneham House, Devon
- Spittal Houses, Yorkshire
- Street Houses, Yorkshire
- New House, Kent
- White House, Suffolk
- Tow House, Northumberland
- Wood House, Lancashire
- Beck Houses, Cumbria
- Carr Houses, Merseyside
- Stone House, Cumbria
- Swain House, Yorkshire
- Smithy Houses, Derbyshire
- Spacey Houses, Yorkshire
- Keld Houses, Yorkshire
- Kennards House, Cornwall
- Heath House, Somerset
- Hey Houses, Lancashire
Photos
7,766 photos found. Showing results 2,881 to 2,900.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 3,457 to 1.
Memories
10,342 memories found. Showing results 1,441 to 1,450.
Hanford Lodge
In about 1967 my mother and father moved to this lodge after selling the Corner Store in Child Okeford. It belonged to Hanford School. It was sad to return a few years ago to find it had burned to the ground. Opposite was one of ...Read more
A memory of Child Okeford in 1967 by
Grain Fort
After the war in 1946 my father, a sergeant in the MPSC, was transfered to Darland camp in Gillingham but as there were no married quarters available there we, as a family, were billeted in the Coastguards quarters on the Isle of ...Read more
A memory of Isle of Grain in 1946 by
Birthplace.
My Uncle Charles and my father James Scott were born at Nether Hall in the early 1900's. The family was in service to Sir Henry Longman. The main family residence was Shendish House in Apsley,Hertfordshire where my ...Read more
A memory of Hathersage in 1900 by
Picture Postcards And Photos
Just wondering if there are any photo's with regards to a sweet shop on Bridge Road Blundellsands called "Confectioners" and photographs of Merrilocks Road.I also remember a great design house on Burbo Bank Road called ...Read more
A memory of Crosby by
Early Schooldays
My memories of Byfield, where I lived on the brand new council estate, in Lovett Road, are idyllic. I was there from age 6 to 10, then we moved to York. We children had to walk what seemed like miles, in all weathers, to the ...Read more
A memory of Byfield in 1954 by
Hop Fields
Horsmonden - the end of my hop picking days. I was born in east London 1939 and hop picking was four weeks in the country, camp fire cooking in the evening, a sing along and down to the Gun or the Town House on Saturday evening. ...Read more
A memory of Horsmonden in 1959 by
Mixed Feelings
I first arrived in Llanegryn at the latter end of 1939 along with my younger sister and a lot of other kids from my school (St Johns)in Birkenhead. I was eight years old at the time and my sister was six. We were all put into the ...Read more
A memory of Llanegryn in 1930 by
Aveley An Age Away.
I lived in Aveley Villiage from when I was born in 1957 until we moved to the Kennington Estate about 1971. We had a funny house in Church View which seemed to be back to front compared to some of my friends houses. Our end of ...Read more
A memory of Aveley by
Burntoakboy
As a boy growing up in Burnt Oak I remember the barrow boys in Watling Avenue, the hustle and bussle of everyday trading, the people gathering round the stalls, the banter, the laughter, the friendliness. Like one family everyone ...Read more
A memory of Burnt Oak in 1954 by
Growing Up In Abridge Roger Walker
We moved to Abridge in 1948, I was 8 years old, with mum and dad Pat and Stan Walker. We lived at no 41 Pancroft Estate later re numbered 45. My early memories of the little villiage was of Brighty's shop and ...Read more
A memory of Abridge in 1948 by
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Captions
6,977 captions found. Showing results 3,457 to 3,480.
Thought to have been built in the late 17th century, this fine old mill house, once one of ten in the Ramsbury area, was turned into a dwelling as late as the 1960s.
Behind it, its octagonal lantern rising above the tree line, is the School House, built in 1823 by Robert Abraham, also for Charles Francis.
It incorporated the original coffee house which the club purchased in 1770 when they moved here from London. The National Horseracing Museum is behind the left section of the façade.
Today it is a private house. The Lloyd family, who set up Lloyds bank, came from Meifod – but the bank in the photograph is the Midland!
The neatly mown lawns and carefully maintained flowerbeds surrounding Cheam Park House are viewed from the vantage point above the porticoed entrance; we are looking down onto the sweeping gravelled drive
All Saints' church on the left is a wonderful example of how churches can continue to be houses of worship, while changing their role slightly to suit modern demands.
Kington was also once described as having a 'maze of narrow streets … where too many of the old houses have been refronted, but still have the attraction of a wildly irregular skyline'.
The Quart Pot, a Baddow Brewery house, was where Wickford's Salvation Army had their early meetings.
This photograph looks across Mayer Park from the terrace of Mayer House. The park still serves as a peaceful oasis for the people of Bebington.
We are looking along Mill Hill Road from the Shippons, a large public house in Thigwall Road.
This village view looks north past Street Farm on the right, and although the big barn on the right has gone, the houses all remain.
Neat flowerbeds surround the drinking fountain with its quaint spire, while in the background, just beyond Jenner's garage and petrol pump, the name of the Smugglers public house hints at past activities
Set in the valley of the River Stour, its Tudor and Jacobean houses have been carefully maintained, and further up the street is the old Woolpack Inn.
These trim houses with their first-floor verandas overlooking the shingle beach and breakwaters, and the neat gardens behind their fences, present an almost idyllic seaside vista.
To the east of the house, the swimming pool, with its red-brick orangery designed by Reginald Cooper in the mid 1930s, presents a peaceful well-ordered scene.
The north side of George Street is raised above the roadway; at the left is part of Edgar Buildings, completed in 1762, whose centrally-pedimented houses close the vista up Milsom Street.
Adam adapted Palladio's own design for a bridge with shops and houses to produce an elegant masterpiece. However, it ruined the builder, and parts had to be reconstructed as early as 1804.
The building on the left, the Old Mill, is a house with an added balcony, while that to the right is now the well known Morris Minor Centre.
Immediately opposite is the Broadmead Hotel, later to become the Picture House (the Torbay Cinema).
The annual running costs of a great house like Chatsworth are over £1 million a year, and apart from selling off the odd painting or other treasure such places have no alternative but to charge visitors
This view shows the south transept (centre left), with the chapter house on the right.
Seen from its modern bypass on the A168 trunk road south of Thirsk, Topcliffe looks like a modern village of new housing estates.
The George & Dragon public house in the foreground (left) was demolished in 1964 to allow very long concrete pillars to be transported around the corner.
In the 1960s two large housing estates were laid out on the east and west of the main street, and in 1972 a Village Society was formed to oppose the continued growth.
Places (80)
Photos (7766)
Memories (10342)
Books (1)
Maps (370)