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Memories
2,047 memories found. Showing results 221 to 230.
The Rec
The "Rec" was the place to be in the 1970's when you lived on the Cedar Rd Estate. We lived just round the corner on Elmdale Rd and had a garden which backed on the Rec. This was a good short cut into the Rec. Lived there as a young ...Read more
A memory of Earl Shilton by
Roundabout And Big Tree
I used to live in Lawrie Park Gardens from 1955 until 1962 and the local youngsters used to congregate at the big tree on the roundabout at the end of Lawrie Park Avenue. At times there were around 10-15 of us all sitting ...Read more
A memory of Sydenham by
Jenny Lind Hospital
I was admitted to this children's hospital in the winter of 1961 aged 5 years, with acute asthma. I remember clearly a green bathroom with lots of hot water pipes and being bathed twice in a morning as I daren`t tell the ...Read more
A memory of Norwich by
Guinea Gap Baths
I am so pleased I first put my memory of Guinea Gap Baths on here. So pleased that people have responded. Val, yes the baths are still there its got a web page its great to look at.
A memory of Wallasey by
St Andrew's Church, Chelmondiston
My mother, Mary Rands, was christened in this church in 1929. Her Grandparents, Herbert and Mary Ann Rands, lived in a cottage at the back of the church called 'Myrtle' They passed away before the second world ...Read more
A memory of Chelmondiston by
Joshua Joseph Johnson's 3 Daughters And The Buckland Family Of South London
My Great Grandmother had two brothers who lived in Newington or Walworth, South London. This would be the area between Camberwell and Kennington to the South and The Elephant ...Read more
A memory of London by
1970 1980s Harrogate
I spent some of the happiest years of my life in Harrogate, working in "The Grange" hotel (an old peoples home basically, along West Stray), I also worked in "Blind Jacks" behind the Prospect Hotel (we sold Old Peculiar ale and ...Read more
A memory of Harrogate by
Not Main St But Everritrs Corner
This is the Bath Rd A4 about a mile from Cippenham Village where there were a few shops and pubs.
A memory of Cippenham by
Dagenham East Dennis
Time spent when a child over somewhere we called the castle. Wasteland oppersit Dagenham east under grand.had some of the best time of my Life I'm now 47 Live at Raymond rd and all ways wanted 2no the history of that land. So ...Read more
A memory of Dagenham by
The Tatling Arms
The Tatling end is one of four locations that I seldom last three hours without thinking about. Nothing impresses me more than a community that keeps it's aesthetic more or less as it was fifteen years ago. Especially in an age of ...Read more
A memory of Tatling End by
Captions
1,059 captions found. Showing results 529 to 552.
Studland has one of the best and least tampered-with beaches in Dorset - a real reminder of those halcyon days when such luminaries as George III promoted the merits of sea bathing.
Bilsborrow lies between Lancaster and Preston on the traffic-laden A6 road. The White Bull inn dates from the 18th century, and still believes in a roaring coal or log fire in winter.
The late Victorian and Edwardian buildings are part of the expansion of Felixstowe as a seaside resort.
On the way up to the White Wells, a man and his dog pause to drink in the dramatic view. Meanwhile the ladies sense the Tearoom just around the corner.
Polkerris was once a fishing harbour with a stone pier, but it is now a popular bathing place.
Ships from South Wales carrying lime and coal were once regular visitors to the town.
Manor Road would not win any architectural awards; in fact, the picture could have been taken in any one of a hundred or so towns where similar houses were built.
We are looking up Lion Street towards St Mary's church, the Town Hall and Fletcher's House in summer sunlight nearly a century ago.
A massive building programme changed the face of Wednesfield in the 1950s, and tower blocks like these seemed for a while to be the answer to the housing problem.
This thatched cottage stands between Bouncers Lane and Blacksmith's Lane, and is one of many half-timbered buildings in the village.
There is an element of restraint amongst these holiday-makers, their clothes hardly suited for the occasion as they explore the sands below the stone jetty.
Beneath the ancient oak are the 'fish stones', steps of a market cross on which monks from nearby Gresgarth displayed their catches for sale.
A pleasant setting against a backdrop of wooded hills and a gentle coastline with wonderful views to the southern Lakes helped establish Silverdale as a quietly fashionable medicinal sea-bathing resort
Remarkably little of the medieval city survives; apart from St Mary Magdalen and a fragment of town wall, the Abbey is the main physical evidence of what was a prosperous town built on the wool trade.
There was considerable expansion of Bath in the later 19th century along the valley towards Bristol. This view looks west along Newbridge Road with its terraces of neat villas.
The north side of George Street is raised above the roadway; at the left is part of Edgar Buildings, completed in 1762, whose centrally-pedimented houses close the vista up Milsom Street.
In the foreground, awnings are pulled out over Briggs shoe shop and the Maypole Dairy. Next door, under the clock, is Mottrams, established in 1865.
side of King Street, adjoinging the old baths site.
The Roman town of Aquae Sulis, now Bath, grew up at the point where the Fosse Way crossed the river Avon.
Was the East Midland's climate ever that good? Open-air swimming pools are probably the direct descendants of the sea-bathing craze that swept the country during the 19th century.
This must be the most visited and certainly the best placed souvenir and refreshment shop in Cornwall, just a stone's throw from the tip of Land's End.
Thomas Cook started his travel business from a building overlooking the Clock Tower in 1841, and the front commemorating this historic undertaking, put up in 1894, is, indeed, special.
Here we see the southern end of the sands on a very crowded day in the 1950s, with the cranes of the harbour and Nothe Fort in the distance.
The nearest tall building on the left is the Skin Clinic, originally the Turkish Baths, and beyond it is the News Theatre.
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