Places
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Photos
134 photos found. Showing results 381 to 134.
Maps
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Books
3 books found. Showing results 457 to 3.
Memories
540 memories found. Showing results 191 to 200.
Growing Up In The 50s
I went to Southchurch High School for Boys after failing my eleven plus in 1948. Tbe headmaster was Mr Haxall a frighteniing person to an eleven year old. A great teacher of history and bookbinding was Mr Bull. The ...Read more
A memory of Southend-on-Sea by
Some History
Having some difficulty commenting/doing a memory of Llangoed. Wanted to use some specific photos shown, but have not had the option to add a memory to them. Maybe because I am the first to do one ? Anyway, the photo of the Post ...Read more
A memory of Llangoed by
Some Memories Of Tighnabruaich
My father's family had holidayed in Tighnabruaich at the end of the 19th century. My parents, when young, stayed at Stronecarrick (end house next to boatyard) and at Lismore which was home of the Olding family. ...Read more
A memory of Tighnabruaich
Drayton Junior School Ealing.
Hi my name is Geraldine.I went to Drayton junior school .Ealing.approx 1972/3.I had a great time there.I lived at St Leonards rd then.Iremember having great fun with my friends Sharon,Jane,Juanita,Mark,.Michael and ...Read more
A memory of Ealing by
Coffee Bar, Lemington.
In the Fifties I discovered, or rather was introduced to, a coffee bar somewhere in Lemington, in Newcastle and this became the place to go! I don't remember what we drank - coffee? squash? I have no recollection. But what I do ...Read more
A memory of Lemington by
Then I Bought A Boat.
For some time I had been thinking it would be nice to own a boat, and with this in mind I would keep my eyes open. It was only then I discovered boats for sale were very few and far between. You might think in a place like ...Read more
A memory of Dartmouth by
Janice Michaels, St Oswalds School, Hexham
Hi everyone, I am posting on here to see if anyone remembers my Mum, she went to St Oswalds in I expect the mid 1940’s to perhaps start of the 1950’s, before then going to Monkseaton Secondary School in Whitley ...Read more
A memory of Allerwash by
Childhood
Wow I can give loads of memories in the 60s Going down there with my parents. Ansty cove; Afternoon tea; Charity box on counter; As a black person supporting foreign aid; Put a coin on his hand twist his ear, coin went in. Also the gong ...Read more
A memory of Torquay by
Chalets Whitsand Bay
My Fathers family of fishermen lived in Cawsand for generations and during my childhood in the early 1950's I used to stay with my Auntie Rose (Hammett) in the family chalet on Whitsand Bay. Mum & Dad staying with family ...Read more
A memory of Whitsand Bay by
1942 As A School Boy.
It is seven o’clock in the morning and the bugler is sounding reveille to wake the men from their bed, the battalion are camped in Heysham head, towards the cookhouse the soldiers do lurch the noise is so deafening, It ...Read more
A memory of Lower Heysham by
Captions
870 captions found. Showing results 457 to 480.
There was nothing at Pevensey Bay when Duke William landed there on 28 September 1066, and it remained empty of habitation for many years .
Rhos-on-Sea was the poorer cousin to nearby Colwyn Bay, yet it still manages an identity of its own.
The fine bay windows of this house have been filled in with concrete and adorned with graffiti, while other windows have been boarded up.
Here the photographer looks down St Thomas Street into Friary Walk, with the corner of the churchyard wall on the right.
A closer view of the Ilchester Arms Inn.
The north breakwater which enclosed the outer harbour in the 1890s also serves as a promenade for visitors.
An incredibly low ebb- tide, which would also have coincided with one of the highest tides of the century, has exposed the rock pools on Lucy's Ledge.
At the bottom end of Fore Street, on the right, is another Elizabethan building: the old Grammar School of 1583, with its tall porch bay, now part of Chard School.
On the left-hand side of the street, the building with the bay window, once the Castle Hotel and then the Co-op, is now Mackays clothing; while the premises to the right, occupied for many years by Folley's
Hayle Bay, with its lines of evenly-breaking surf and golden sand, is now a mecca for surfers and tourists, and New Polzeath has grown along the low cliffs on the opposite side of the beach.
Since the opening of the railway, Swanage has vastly increased in favour as a watering-place; it is situated in a beautiful bay, and commands a glorious prospect of down and sea and cliff.
Development dating from the 19th and early 20th centuries has crept up the hill away from the little fishing harbour on the east side of the Lizard peninsula.
Lines of wind shelters adorn the beach at the popular Yorkshire coast resort of Filey.
A lone oarsman makes his way from Sandside towards the west pier, as one of the pleasure boats returns to dis- charge its cargo of happy holidaymakers.
Several winding walks form an alternative way to return to Babbacombe for the energetic, or in the winter months when the cliff railway is closed.
Opposite the parish church are to be found a row of late Victorian houses known as Britannia Terrace, characterised by their bay windows and long front gardens.
A little further south, is Jesus Hospital, a fine quadrangle of 28 single- storey almshouses with a taller entrance bay. A
Square-sterned cobles carrying a single lug sail, but capable of deploying a jib upon their long bowsprits, earn their keep taking trippers on excursions round the bay.
Here we see the Queen of the Resorts in all its glory.
Cornish fishermen netted every fish they could, but the pilchard was the most crucial and sought after.
The building on the left was Mr Lemon the vet's, and has a horse's tail hanging at the far end. To the right with the bay window is the sweet shop run by the King family until the 1980s.
This view shows the visitor's entrance below the oriel window (left) and the single-storey gunroom next to it.
This working port is at the centre of the sweep of Mount's Bay.
Rhyl is famous for its great windy expanse of beach facing Liverpool Bay.
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