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

Photos

267 photos found. Showing results 361 to 267.

Maps

509 maps found.

1903-1904, Low Gate Ref. RNC768114
1897-1898, Low Street Ref. RNC768545
1903-1904, Low Walton Ref. RNC768588
1903-1904, Low Whita Ref. RNC768606
1947, Bolton Low Houses Ref. NPO645664
1897, Bolton Low Houses Ref. RNE645664
1888 - 1899, Low Harker Ref. HOSM52422
1890 - 1891, Low Kingthorpe Ref. HOSM50230
1885 - 1886, Low Wood Ref. HOSM57516
1896 - 1913, Low Dinsdale Ref. HOSM52404
1897 - 1910, Low Biggins Ref. HOSM52393
1851 - 1890, Low Laithes Ref. HOSM52433
1880 - 1890, Low Marishes Ref. HOSM52435
1890 - 1901, Low Bradfield Ref. HOSM52394
1877 - 1878, Fenton Low Ref. HOSM45309
1912, Low Stott Park Ref. HOSM52450
1892 - 1911, Low Hawsker Ref. HOSM52424
1901-1902, Wrangle Low Ground Ref. RNC874832
1882 - 1901, Low Town Ref. HOSM45295
1890 - 1899, Low Whinnow Ref. HOSM64315

Books

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

Memories

637 memories found. Showing results 181 to 190.

Angmering On Sea Beach Huts

I first went to Angmering after the war. My grandparents lived there and we used to spend time there in the summer. In those days there were no such things as beach furniture or pic-nic equipment. We had an ex army ...Read more

A memory of Angmering in 1950

Searching For Members Of The Knowles Family

Calling Roger Knowles I am searching for family rather than having a memory. My mother was born Marjorie Knowles in 1903, sixth child of Christopher William and Hannah Law of Burton. Her ...Read more

A memory of High Bentham by Glenn Matthews

Police Houses

I used to live with my aunt and uncle at 10 the Crescent from 1948 to 1954. It was a fantastic life there with woods to play in, and streams to divert. An absolute paradise.  As young children we could play all day in the woods in ...Read more

A memory of Hindlip in 1948 by Chris Westwood

Benholm Bothy

Responding to Judi Parry's memory of visiting Johnshaven and her mother's surname of Low, I hae a single census record (1901) of my great uncle David Low at the age of 19 being a blacksmith apprentice at the blacksmith's bothy, ...Read more

A memory of Johnshaven in 1900 by James Mc Carthy

The Sycamores

My grandfather, Gerard Murgatroyd, was born in a house in Knutsford called "The Sycamores" in 1879. I live in Montreal and my father died in 1949 when I was two. My grandfather died before my parents met and there was no love lost ...Read more

A memory of Knutsford in 1989 by Carol Murgatroyd

That Morris Minor Traveller Has To Be Our Dad's Car!

My family lived at No 3 (the top flat), Corner House, at the top end of Broad Street, first on the left looking at the photo (but just out of the picture) for many years from 1947 or so. I ...Read more

A memory of New Alresford in 1947 by John Dear

Kelvin Grove School

I would have taken the 11+ at Kelvin Grove. I remember the laundry behind the school blowing up. I went there from 1952 to 1958 and lived in Forest Hill. Teachers I remember are: Ms Doubleday (very strict - nobody liked ...Read more

A memory of Sydenham in 1958 by Marion Del Favero

Henson Ancestry

An ancester of mine, Edith Rebecca Henson, lived in Worlaby in the late 1800s/early 1900s in Low Road or Top Road, Worlaby. She lived with the Rusling family as a niece. She married Richard Frank Henson in 1905. They ...Read more

A memory of Worlaby in 1890

Long Term Hospital Stay

I seem to recall a long term stay at this hospital (approx 11 months) in 1976-77. I suffered from asthma but I am not sure why I had to stay for that period of time. I was also on the Florence Gibson Ward and remember a ...Read more

A memory of Heswall in 1977 by Ian Gosling

An Under Housemaid At Williamscot House

When my Great Aunt Phyllis Ivy Jarrett left school at the age of 13 (about 1918), she joined the domestic staff at Williamscot House, where she was an 'under-housemaid'. Phyllis used to send photos home ...Read more

A memory of Williamscot in 1920

Captions

477 captions found. Showing results 433 to 456.

Caption For Plymouth, Hoe And Mount Edgcumbe 1904

The exposed position of the bandstand meant that it had to have a revolving glass screen to prevent the performers' music blowing away!

Caption For Totnes, Butterwalk 1896

A lower view of the High Street. The covered walks, created by overhanging stories, were the location of two historic parts of the market area.

Caption For Morley, Queens Street C1965

After the 1930s the next blow to the Woollen District came in the 1960s with the import of cheap Italian heavy-woollen skirtings and coatings.

Caption For Morley, Queens Street C1965

After the 1930s the next blow to the Woollen District came in the 1960s with the import of cheap Italian heavy-woollen skirtings and coatings.

Caption For Newquay, On The Sands 1912

The rocky cliff faces are scored and pitted by wind and waves, causing sizeable blowing holes and fissures.

Caption For Bainbridge, The Green 1906

An annual custom associated with this tradition is the blowing of a forest horn every night from the end of September to Shrovetide.

Caption For Greatstone, Sand Dunes C1955

One drawback is the wind, which can spoil a picnic and blow beach balls out of sight.

Caption For Bainbridge, The Green 1906

An annual custom associated with this tradition is the blowing of a forest horn every night from the end of September to Shrovetide.

Caption For Redcar, The Beach C1955

Notice how few of the people shown are in swimming costumes - perhaps there was a chill wind blowing off the sea?

Caption For Castleton, The Winnats C1864

This awesome cleft's name derives from Old English words meaning 'wind gates' - a reference to the howling winds which blow down this limestone ravine, which was created under a tropical sea 350 million

Caption For Morley, Queens Street C1965

After the 1930s the next blow to the Woollen District came in the 1960s with the import of cheap Italian heavy-woollen skirtings and coatings.

Caption For Accrington, The Rock Gardens, Oak Hill Park 2004

It reads: 'There's not a tint that paints the rose Or decks the lily fair Or streaks the humblest flower that blows But God has placed it there.'

Caption For Kingston Lisle, King Alfred's Blowing Stone C1955

Legend has it that King Alfred used the blowing stone to call his troops into battle. A mighty puff into the uppermost hole is said to produce a loud foghorn-type sound.

Caption For Falmouth, Flushing From Green Bank 1893

The calm waters are a significant feature of the shelter here, even when storm force winds are blowing outside in the bay.

Caption For Lytham, The Windmill And Lifeboat House 1907

Sited to take full advantage of the winds blowing off the Irish Sea, it was built as a corn mill in about 1805.

Caption For Stow On The Wold, The Green C1955

'Stow-on-the-Wold, where the wind blows cold…' runs the ancient rhyme. The highest town in the Cotswolds can certainly be windswept, particularly in the winter.

Caption For Oxford, The Rollers, On The Cherwell 1906

The Rollers enabled punts to be moved from a lower part of the river to a higher part. Beside this stretch there was a nude bathing place for men called Parson's Pleasure.

Caption For Pilling, The Old Mill C1960

The Fylde plain once had many such mills, benefiting from the strong prevailing winds blowing unchecked off the Irish Sea.

Caption For Douglas, Rough Sea 1903

The Irish Sea can be as flat as a mill pond, but when an easterly, south-easterly or north-easterly gale blows up, this is what happens at Douglas.

Caption For Porth, 1925

Porth Island squats in the sea opposite, and there among the pinks is a blowing hole that discharges a cloud of spray of such size and force that it can be seen from Newquay.

Caption For Scarborough, The Beach C1960

The degree of cloth- ing being worn would indicate that the chill easterly breeze that often affects this coast is blowing.

Caption For Ripon, Market Place C1960

The Market Place at Ripon is still the scene of the daily 'Setting the Watch' ceremony, when the city Wakeman blows his ancient horn at 9pm to announce that the city is now in his care.

Caption For Redcar, Coatham Enclosure, The Boating Lake C1955

The Coatham Enclosure was created from an area of sand dunes, and a retaining wall - the New Promenade - was built to protect the area from the blowing sand. This boating lake opened in 1930.

Caption For Letchworth Garden City, St Mary's Church 1924

It is only 60ft long, and consists of a nave and a lower chancel. There is no tower, just a small bell turret which was added around 1500.