Places
3 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
1,193 photos found. Showing results 301 to 320.
Maps
27 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 361 to 2.
Memories
488 memories found. Showing results 151 to 160.
Trevor
I have many many fond memories of Trevor. I grew up there as a child but was moved away from there at the age of 11. I lived across the road from the community centre, No 45, Julie Roberts used to live next door and my best mate Vincent ...Read more
A memory of Trevor by
Fishing On The Canal
I used to fish here quite a bit in the late 1960s. It was not far from the bus station.
A memory of Banbury by
M62 Motorway Bridge
I remember being taken to Peel Green one Sunday, and witnessed the opening of the new bridge over the canal. On that day, the bridge was closed to all motor traffic, and thousands of people walked across it, quite a unique ...Read more
A memory of Eccles by
Trevor Living There Practically All My Life
Further to Gary's memory I was the Julie that he lived next door to but my surname was Evans. For practically all of my life I have lived in Trevor and still see many of the people that I grew up with. ...Read more
A memory of Trevor in 2009 by
My Childhood In Astmoor
I lived in Astmoor with my grandparents. My grandma sold sweets, pop and cigarettes. I went to Halton School and walked down Astmoor Lane which we called Summer Lane. Grandad worked at Astmoor tannery. We lived next to Ivy ...Read more
A memory of Astmoor in 1956 by
Drawbridge Cottage Exeter Canal Photo Ref 82302
Ref: 82302 This is a photo of Drawbridge Cottage where my family lived in 1901. John Thomas Helley and wife Eliza Ann(nee Gitsham) lived there with their children Florence, Maud, Louie ...Read more
A memory of Newton St Cyres in 1920 by
Growing Up In The Avenues
I left school in 1965, Ogley Hay Girls' School, my maiden name was Kathleen Cooper. My birth father was George Kelly although I was brought up by my grandparents, Nell and Gerald Cooper. I loved the avenues, everyone ...Read more
A memory of Brownhills in 1965 by
My Time Near Andover
WE were married in July 1966. As I was stationed at Middle Wallop, after our honeymoon in London we caught the train to Andover and stayed for 2 nights at the White Hart (is that the name? Opposite the old bus station near the ...Read more
A memory of Andover by
Channel View
I've seen this photo in several places and it's always captioned as being 1965 - it's got to be before that because I lived in Channel View from 1960 to 63 just below those garages on the right of the photo - and in this photo the ...Read more
A memory of Risca in 1960 by
Napier Terrace
I was born in Wisbech in 1937 in Ramnoth Road, we moved to Napier Terrace on the canal until after the war when we moved to Wales. I have fond memories of living in Napier Terrace, we lived in the last house, No 37. My father was in ...Read more
A memory of Wisbech by
Captions
720 captions found. Showing results 361 to 384.
Broad-canopied trees cast reflections in the waters of the ornamental Dutch canal leading towards the building. In 1946 the garden house was converted into holiday accommodation.
At the bottom of Wells Hill we can see the railway station, which came with the Bath and Bristol line in 1874, succeeding a canal and tramway for carrying coal.
Once a canal feeder, Chasewater was developed for recreational purposes in the late 1950s offering sailing and boating.
The old Turf Lock Inn stands near the lock gates where the Exeter Canal - probably the oldest in England - meets the Exe estuary.
According to some sources, they also helped to construct the nearby Basingstoke Canal. Odiham churchyard contains the graves of several French prisoners.
A craft heads southwards towards Blisworth Tunnel on the Grand Union Canal.
This institution, originally founded in 1867 as an asylum for pauper lunatics, lies to the north of the Basingstoke Canal and the main railway line.
Below them meanders the River Frome, with canal and railway line running in parallel, flanked by foundries and business parks.
The Rochdale Canal, seen here in the foreground, runs through the valley, and brought jobs and prosperity to the town. The spire of the parish church watches over the town school in the background.
This is a typical Oxford Canal drawbridge. You may be surprised to learn that they are quite easy to operate, for they are very well-balanced.
This pleasant village on the Trent & Mersey Canal was a popular stop-off point for old boatmen: the pubs in the village were the main attraction. The church is mainly 13th- and 14th-century.
In the Stourport basin, in dry dock by the big wharf, boats can be refurbished; the basin, reached by the canal through locks, was built to accommodate and service longboats with a full
With so many canals recently restored for leisure purposes, this is a scene that is still very familiar to fishermen, walkers and boat people all over the country.
The Sheffield & South Yorkshire was established in 1895, and was created from a grouping of several much older waterways, including the Stainforth & Keady and the Sheffield canals.
These locks are so close together that in order to maintain a satisfactory supply of water, it was necessary to extend the canal at the left-hand side above each chamber.
This is where the (un-navigable) river Witham and the Roman-built Fossdyke Canal joined.
The Sheffield & South Yorkshire was established in 1895, and was created from a grouping of several much older waterways, including the Stainforth & Keady and the Sheffield canals.
To the right was a canal and railway siding, where barges were loaded with lime and bricks for the local and London markets.
Another view of the Manchester Ship Canal, in this case beside the Old Quay.
There has been a hostelry on this site for many centuries, but this version was originally built to cater for the navigators who built the Grand Union Canal.
The Frome valley, dotted with mills and and with the Thames and Severn Canal running through it, has long been a centre of industry. Chalford itself stands on the steep north bank.
Looking along the Staffordshire & Worcestershire Canal towards the T-junction with the Trent & Mersey, an attractive bridge carries the latter's towpath across the former on a slender brick arch with
A bridge crosses the canal just to the left of the picture.
The circular building on the right used to be the house of a canal lengthsman, or maintenance man.
Places (3)
Photos (1193)
Memories (488)
Books (2)
Maps (27)