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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 201 to 210.
St Lawrence Church
St Lawrence Church holds special memories for my wife and I. We were married there in April 1961 and renewed our vows to each other some thirty years later when we were holidaying and reminiscing from Australia. It is a beautiful ...Read more
A memory of Morden in 1961 by
The Poplars The Maltsters Bottom Of London Road
This is the view looking down to the end of London Road where it meets the village. The road does a sharp turn to the left into the Market Place and behind the large tree is 'Top Bayles' grocers shop. ...Read more
A memory of Abridge in 1961
Little Green Buses Along The Prom.
For many years, Colwyn Bay U.D.C. ran a bus service along the promenade from Old Colwyn to just beyond the former pier at Rhos on Sea. Commencing in 1926, a small fleet of 5 'Guy' BB type vehicles with covered ...Read more
A memory of Colwyn Bay in 1961 by
Durham Cathedral
My granddad and nana, Lydia and Alan Field, lived in the house under the arches to the Cathedral. He was the porter and I remember helping him ring the bell in the cathedral. His office or Lodge as we called it, was opposite the ...Read more
A memory of Durham in 1960 by
Mini Fishing
I remember fishing here with our mini bottles. Catching minows with wine bottles with the bottom knocked out ( hard to find ). Remember once being trapped under these arches with the river rising and being surrounded by the ...Read more
A memory of Shipston-on-Stour in 1960 by
St Marys Church
We lived in an upstairs flat in South Ealing. The tube railway line ran behind our flat, and beyond that, allotments. We also had a good view of St. Mary's church. It was wonderful to hear the bells ring on Sunday mornings. I ...Read more
A memory of South Acton in 1960 by
The Old Cinema
We moved to Egham in about 1955. My father had been born in Medlake Road in 1920. We lived in Oak Avenue, Egham Hythe in a house built in the 1930s. I attended Egham Hythe Infants and Primary and later Magna Carta (on both its sites ...Read more
A memory of Egham in 1960 by
School Days
Before becoming the home of George Harrison of the Beatles, Friar Park was run as a school by sisters of the St. John Bosco order. This was my first school and I remember having to walk all the way to the main door along the ...Read more
A memory of Henley-on-Thames in 1960 by
Growing Up At Coombe Place
My family and I moved to a bungalow at Coombe Place in 1960. My father, Walter Motley, took up the post of farm manager on this 100 acre dairy farm with a herd of Jersey cattle. Coombe Place is set on the side of the South ...Read more
A memory of Offham in 1960 by
St Lo
A place on Westcliff Road, Broadstairs, during the early sixties, named St Lo. Used as a skating rink, and as a dance rock n roll club, on Tuesdays and Saturdays. Anyone having any descriptive memories, of this St Lo, social hall - rock ...Read more
A memory of Broadstairs in 1960
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 481 to 504.
The 16th-century stone bridge steps quietly by way of its five arches across the reedy Rothley Brook; the original roadway into the village is now reduced to a footpath.
Out of sight, screened by trees, is the parish churchyard and the Victorian church; to the south of the church stands the old font in a niche below a 13th-century arch from the old church
The magnificence of the church was rather spoilt by the 18th-century red brick tower with classical blank arches and windows (see photograph 35493), built after much of the medieval tower
Between them are the solid shapes of Sundial Cottage and Library Cottage, and No 11 with its gabled frontage above an arched doorway (centre right).
Behind the mini-van on the left, the Butchers Arms had replaced a much older half- timbered building damaged extensively by fire in 1939.
One such can be seen sandwiched between two barges. The Anderton Lift created a much faster passage for boats and increased the tonnage of river traffic to 226,000 in 1913.
After a disastrous fire in 1174, the new choir was designed by William of Sens, a French master mason who was versed in the Gothic style of northern France, with its pointed arches and universal stone-built
It is thought that Macbeth may have lived at Inverness Castle, or used it as a base for operations against the Orcadians.The suspension bridge superseded a stone bridge of seven arches which was destroyed
The chancel arch and font date from this time, the tower is late 14th-century and the south aisle was added during a restoration of 1531.
This view is taken from the brick four-centred arch into Market Square. The brick footpath heads towards the porch which, with the south aisle, was added in 1870 to designs by H E Rumble.
This is a much changed view: the working barges have gone, to be replaced by ranks of houseboats.
This is a much more recent view of this district of Worthing. Nearby there is a large old cemetery and chapel, with many graves of the wealthy.
Here at Fleshwick, visitors can explore this superb natural arch.
This photograph, taken from the east bank of the river, south of the Barley Mow pub, manages to exclude George Gilbert Scott's rather fine 1864 seven-arched brick bridge over the river.
His poem about the embittered fisherman Peter Grimes inspired an opera by a much later and better known resident, Benjamin Britten.
When Leeds town hall was opened by Queen Victoria, the streets were lined with palm trees and triumphal arches.
Here it can be seen at the end of the street, past the Lion Hotel and the arched entrance to the British Legion Club.
Coping stones now surround the edge of the lake, and the arch of roses that spanned Picklefoot Spring at the point where it emerges has been constructed.
An inscription on the underside of the central arch reveals that the bridge was 'finished in the year 1813 by John Dyson, Engineer, Jesse Bushrod, Mason.` Inside the downstream parapet, an 1827
statue of the Duke of Wellington seated on his horse, Copenhagen, has been situated on Round Hill since 1885, when it was brought from Hyde Park Corner in London where it had dwarfed the Constitution Arch
The second light stands a little way behind, in the town, a much taller tower modelled on the Pharos light of ancient Alexandria.
Not far from the cafe is the four-arch sandstone bridge over the Derwent, built in 1775 by York architect John Carr.
The arched footbridge gives access over the River Brett, which flows through the village.
This building replaced a much smaller church on the same site. The construction of the new St Augustine's began in 1865; dedication by the Bishop of Llandaff followed the next year.
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