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
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Photos
123 photos found. Showing results 21 to 40.
Maps
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Memories
1,367 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
The Red Lion And The Square
My parents ran the Red Lion between 1953-83. I was brought up here and went to Blendworth School, Mrs Byrne was the headmistress. The pub was situated on a tight bend on the old A3 and was regularly hit by vehicles ...Read more
A memory of Horndean in 1960 by
My House On The Hill!
We lived in Innellan for about 3 years and I have very fond memories of being there. My husband was in the Navy stationed aboard the U.S.S. Hunley in Dunoon at the time and we found this lovely 2 storey house right on the ...Read more
A memory of Innellan in 1964 by
Number 2 Montague Terrace
Barbara Brian. I loved reading your memories of Montague Terrace and I thank you for them. Were you the young Miss Andrews that rode that posh bicycle and lived behind the shop and did your dad at times teach tap ...Read more
A memory of Bishopstoke in 1930 by
Mr Hill The Butcher
I can remember shopping with my mother at Mr Hill's shop until sometime in the 1970s. We believe that he was one of the last butchers to wrap the meat in newspaper and to have sawdust on the shop floor.
A memory of Byfleet in 1971 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
My Mum's Hairdressing Salon
Right on the end of this barn, hidden from view was a small irregular building with it's own door. It had been a small butchers shop some time before my Mum and Dad bought it as a hairdressing salon for my mum ...Read more
A memory of Bolton-by-Bowland in 1977 by
Where I Grew Up Born 1944
My Mum and Dad moved into the village in the 1930's into a new house in Rogers Lane and lived there for 66 years. My father was the village tailor working from a workshop in the back garden. My mother was very ...Read more
A memory of Stoke Poges in 1950 by
Christmas
I remember Clapham High Street well. My mum worked in Lyons Tea Shop that stood next to the bank. It turned into the butcher shop. I remember meeting my mum, she would have all left over cakes. We thought it was great - all the sticky buns and gingerbread men. It was memories of my childhood.
A memory of Clapham in 1965 by
Cove Farnborough Hants
I was born in Farnborough and lived in Pinehurst Cottages until the age of six. My father, Charles Dunbar was an engineer at The Royal Aircraft Establishment. Later we moved to 166 Keith Lucas Road and later to 16 Fowler Road in ...Read more
A memory of Cove in 1950 by
The Palace Cinema
The pub on the left of the picture was renowned for a few brawls in it's time, originally called The Globe (now known as Raferty's) I recall walking down Cambridge St and seeing a man being hurled through the window into ...Read more
A memory of Wellingborough in 1968 by
Captions
311 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
L W Newman (right) was a butcher, and was replaced by another butcher, Thornalley.
L W Newman (right) was a butcher, and was replaced by another butcher, Thornalley.
Along here were branches of both national and Cheshire retailers including Dewhurst, the butchers, and Waterworths.
On the left we see the long- established Andrassy's butcher's shop – it opened in 1886. Bradley's butcher's shop next to the stop sign (right) is still trading.
The shelves at the front of the shops and the hooks overhead indicate that these were butchers' shops.
This was built in 1855, along with Butchers Row. Again, the man responsible was R D Gould. Designed for traders to display their wares in panniers, the building is essentially unchanged today.
The shelves at the front of the shops and the hooks overhead indicate that these were butchers' shops.
The butcher's on the right-hand side of the road is taking every precaution to keep the temperature down inside his shop.
Between King's Square and Pavement, the Shambles were once known as the Fleshammels, or butchers' street; in this picture several of the late 13th- to early 14th-century shops were still fulfilling that
Many German families traded here from the 1880s, including firms such as Haganbach's the bakers and numerous pork butchers like Ziegler's, Oesterlein's and Weegman's.
Note on the left Hartshorn the Butcher, purveyor to the Duke of Connaught. Note the fire station and post office also seen in picture 21343.
In the 1900s these included a tobacconist's, a bank, and two butchers. It now houses the regimental museum of the Green Howards.
On the left is the jettied Falcon Inn, now a butcher's shop; Geoffrey Nudd next door, a tobacconist's, and Woolworth's have been rebuilt. The three gables over Hepworths have been removed.
The shop to the left was once the local butcher's.
'Thomas Butcher' to the right has been redeveloped and the steps are no longer to be seen.
The butcher's, nearest the camera, is certainly attracting window-shoppers. Just to its left is a cafeteria.
In complete contrast to photograph H167008, here we have a rainy morning in downtown Hadleigh by the Rectory Road shops.A pram is parked outside the butcher's shop, whilst on the opposite side of the
In later years the family home became a butcher's shop, and the other part became an inn.
Pook Brothers' butcher's shop, on the right, has a fine display of meat that would throw today's health inspectors into an immediate lather.
It included many shops - a butcher's, a grocer's, a milliner's, a shoe shop and a furniture shop. The building now awaits restoration.
A delivery cart from Hine Brothers, butchers in Beaminster, is seen here in the main street at Melplash.
This small village, set amongst the Clwyddian Range of hills, once boasted seven pubs; the shop we see here is a grocer and butcher.
On the left is Mr Kerrison the butcher's ornamented shop front, with a refined iron balcony overhead.
Note the branch of Woolworth's just visible at the end of the street, and the branch of Dewhurst the butchers among the other shops on the right.
Places (2)
Photos (123)
Memories (1367)
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Maps (13)