Places
32 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Bishops Court, County Down
- Hampton Court, Greater London
- Earl's Court, Greater London
- Littleham Court, Devon
- Pauntley Court, Gloucestershire
- Ifield Court, Kent
- Crosby Court, Yorkshire
- Maidenhead Court, Berkshire
- Burham Court, Kent
- Stowting Court, Kent
- North Court, Somerset
- Upleadon Court, Gloucestershire
- Farleigh Court, Surrey
- Whitfield Court, Surrey
- Court Corner, Hampshire
- Dean Court, Oxfordshire
- Oakley Court, Oxfordshire
- Pitt Court, Gloucestershire
- Walton Court, Buckinghamshire
- Checkendon Court, Oxfordshire
- Ashridge Court, Devon
- Court Orchard, Dorset
- Llangewydd Court, Mid Glamorgan
- Upper Hardres Court, Kent
- Court Barton, Devon (near Christow)
- Court Colman, Mid Glamorgan
- Stretford Court, Hereford & Worcester
- Frampton Court, Gloucestershire (near Hailes)
- Barton Court, Hereford & Worcester
- Court-at-Street, Kent
- Bishop's Court, Isle of Man
- Court House Green, West Midlands
Photos
1,517 photos found. Showing results 361 to 380.
Maps
130 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
930 memories found. Showing results 181 to 190.
Allhallowgate Ripon
Does anyone remember allhallowgate in the early 1950s. We the Edwards lived in central court before the flats were built. Our neighbours were Mrs remmer who then became Mrs styan, Madge and Joe sawyer and our friend Pauline, wilf and ...Read more
A memory of Ripon by
Cruel Hornsea Children's Convalescent Home Remembered
I was at the children's convalescent home in 1960, when I was 11. Dad had passed away when I was 8 and I was diagnosed with a nervous breakdown 3 years later. So off I was sent to convalesce at ...Read more
A memory of Hornsea by
Long Hot Summers
we lived in valiant road in the 60s. my name is janet squire, I had an older brother david. I remember the club house, the air raid shelters and the lollipop lady. there was an old car in the woods that we would ...Read more
A memory of Coddington by
Woodville Road, Ham, Prefabs
My Family moved into the newly built Prefabs in Woodville Road when they were first opened up for occupancy. I can't remember what year it was. Does anybody know what the date was? The Prefabs were kitted out with a Fridge ...Read more
A memory of Ham by
Tulse Hill Tesco Esso Petrol Station Formerly Cheriton Court Garage
Where the present Tulse Hill Tesco Shop and Esso Petrol station stands today, was the home of my grandfather Alfred John Thomas from the 1920's to the 1950's. Through the ...Read more
A memory of Tulse Hill by
Wimbledon By The Sea
Every July, the houses with tennis courts in the garden hosted a tournament (don't know who organised it). I remember turning up one year full of enthusiasm, only to be thoroughly beaten by a chap who had been playing in a ...Read more
A memory of Sandilands by
Box Hill By Bike
I used to go to Box Hill from Hanwell with my friend David Potts on our bikes. This was around 1959/60. I remember the very slow ride to the top. On the way back I remember the wonderful cycle track. It was a long run back via, Esher, Hampton Court, Bushey Park Twickenham, and Brentford.
A memory of Box Hill by
Fond Memories Of Godstone
As soon as I was old enough to drive, my Dad taught me, we used to drive down to Godstone from Kenley quite often and we would go to either the Hare & Hounds or the White Hart for a beer, sometimes a meal. In my courting ...Read more
A memory of Godstone by
Don Everall Trelawne Holidays
50 years ago I got on a Don Everall Coach at 9pm at the Bull Stake Darlaston. We travelled through the night arriving around 8am on Bodmin moor where we changed coaches for the remainder of the journey to ...Read more
A memory of Trelawne Manor by
Manor Park
How many happy hours I spent in this park as a child, teenager and young woman. The gardens by the tennis courts were so well kept and I remember sitting on the benches there with my mother when we walked back from town. I remember ...Read more
A memory of Aldershot by
Captions
532 captions found. Showing results 433 to 456.
Jireh Court has been a particularly successful development, primarily because of its location, just a five-minute walk to either the bus or railway station, yet only five minutes from the Broadway
A game of tennis is in progress on a court marked out in the sand. The masts of trading ships are seen in the harbour; its north pier was to be badly damaged in a north-east gale two years later.
The houses on the left were demolished to make way for an office block, whilst beyond the maisonettes on the right is a glimpse of the then new residential development of Jireh Court.
On the right is the garden wall to Little Court, and behind the trees stands Layston School, skirted on the west by Paddock Road.
Court sittings permitting, we can tour the castle today and see much of this fascinating place, including the condemned cell, and an early gallows.
It is now replaced by a block of flats, while the foreground field is now a tennis court; behind the photographer are now modern houses along Church Road.
In the park to its north is Crowcombe Court, a Georgian country house built in the 1720s and 1730s for Thomas Carew.
The County Magistrates' Court ran on simple and firm sets of rules, relying on moral and ethical principles as much as on legislature.
Between Roman Road and Roman Court lies the site of a Roman bath house, but the most tangible reminder of the Roman presence in this area is the fort which stands in the middle of the New Kilpatrick
At the right in both views is Temple Island, the start of the course, with its gar- den temple by James Wyatt, erected in 1771 as a fishing lodge for Sambrook Freeman of Fawley Court.
They date to the height of the resort's fame, when King George III and his court spent each summer in Weymouth during the Napoleonic Wars.
The Victorian tennis authorities had suggested that the ball should be allowed to bounce twice to give the ladies time to get about the court, but the idea was rejected.
West Court is behind the trees.
This is the frontage of Wykes Court when it was the home of Major George Murray Dammer.
Incidentally, it was in the castle that Dickie Pearce, England's last court jester, died while midway through a performance.
A Television Regular The Stafford building most often shown on television is without doubt that of the Law Courts, frequently appearing on Midland news broadcasts at the time of major trials.
Nearby is Corsham Court, a large manor house built in Elizabethan style. Thomas Smythe of London, haberdasher and Collector of the Customs, erected it in 1582.
The creeper-covered house on the right is Cheam Court Farmhouse.
A lady walks briskly across Station Way towards Cheam Court and the local branch of Teekoff, which had a sister establishment in the Cheam Road at Sutton.
greens; because it was all part of the Pudsay estate, there was no pressure to expand or to pull down and rebuild.The right-hand side of the building at the end of the path was at one time the old Court
transformed in around 1910 into a mansion, and its barn and the stables at the left converted to houses; the other farmbuildings have been demolished, and their site is occupied by school tennis courts
St George's Hall is unique, being a combination of two law courts, a concert hall, a theatre, a jail and cells. This is one of the finest buildings in the whole of Great Britain.
Here we see the front face of Owen's College on Oxford Road, and you can see similarities to the Assize Court, and even the Town Hall, all of which were designed by Alfred Waterhouse.
To the left, the bell turret belongs to the Old Court House and former police station, built a little earlier in 1861.
Places (32)
Photos (1517)
Memories (930)
Books (0)
Maps (130)